
Kids' boxing class in Ipswich stirs memories for Nicola Adams
Adams took up boxing as a teenager in West Yorkshire, and said the sport offered young people a sense of purpose."It helped me out a lot when I was younger, growing up on a council estate in Leeds," she said."It gave me focus and drive and something to dedicate my life to."After retaining her flyweight title in Rio in 2016 and turning pro in 2017, Adams stepped down from the sport over fears she could lose her sight.But she hasn't lost her passion for the ring."I'm here for the love of boxing, and I like to help out the kids."I think it's always inspiring when you get to see someone in the flesh who's achieved so much in boxing. It gives you so much more motivation," she said.
As well as becoming the first ever female Olympic boxing gold medallist in 2012, Adams was also the first open member of the LGBT community to become champion.Known for her appearance on Strictly Come Dancing alongside Katya Jones, she is the new host of the BBC's LGBT Sport Podcast.Eilish Tierney, the first professional female boxer in Ipswich, was also at the club and trained with Adams."To have someone of her calibre give me advice is mental," she said. "She opened the door for so many young females to consider being pro, let alone boxing."It's absolutely incredible what she's doing for women, gay women, black women. To have met such an amazing woman, let alone a boxer – it's awesome."
Mr Ottley, 55, agreed about his niece, who he described as "top drawer"."What an ambassador she is for the sport," he said."We want to see more girls come into this sport."We might get another Nicola Adams, but even if they just want to get fit - great. It's important to get them off the street, doing something productive."
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BBC News
31 minutes ago
- BBC News
Super League 2.0 - how has netball's relaunch gone?
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England Netball has its headquarters in the Leicestershire town, and the team continue to set high standards.A fifth consecutive appearance in the Grand Final - with London Pulse their opponents - showed the team led by coach Vic Burgess remain an exemplar for league newcomers and established sides alike. Painful reminders The season's opening night served up a cruel reminder that netball players risk serious injury every time they take to the are offering better training facilities and more opportunities to spend time in the gym, but women in sport remain far more susceptible to non-contact serious injuries than men. That was highlighted when London Mavericks' Vicki Oyesola crumpled to the court floor after landing a little awkwardly against Cardiff was the dreaded anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) knee injury, the bane of many a netballer's career - a season-ender on day one. NSL says women are six times more likely to sustain such a non-contact injury than men, while a National Ligament Registry study has shown there are only more ACLs suffered by women in skiing than in setbacks have followed, with Birmingham Panthers goal shooter Sigi Burger suffering a complete tear of her medial collateral Thunder captain Amy Carter, who is a junior doctor and missed the 2022 season with an ACL injury, explained to BBC Sport why netballers suffer so badly."It's a few different things. Your hips are a little bit wider, your knees are a bit closer together, you're more likely to do your ACL," Carter said. "You've got the menstrual cycle to take into account, which can increase your risk when you're on your period. The nature of the game, the change of directions, the high impact, the stopping still straight away, that can also contribute to it."Research continues into how players might mitigate risk, but knees are not the only problem. Panthers' Gabby Marshall retired in May after a second concussion injury in a month. Packing them in More than 50% of games have been played in major arenas this season and there has been a sharp climb in regular-season crowds have been estimated at about 1,500 in 2024, and league officials announced there was a 42% rise this a first season of the so-called NSL 2.0 era, the rise signals strong an intriguing comparison, the first season of Women's Super League football following a similar reboot in 2014 resulted in average crowds of 728 (from 562 in 2013). Capital gains for grand finale The move to switch the Grand Final from Birmingham to London's O2 reflected an ambition to see netball played in the biggest possible indoor 'think big' approach has been clear all season and England Netball said ticket sales mean the season-ending showpiece will be the best-attended netball event in England since 2002. Big steps - but what about next steps? The introduction of a two-point super shot this season raised play for the final five minutes of each quarter, NSL hoped it would lead to closer matches. There was also the prospect it could spark thrilling comebacks or blowout players and coaches liked the idea, some did not. NSL has contentedly reported a 23% increase in games with less than a five-goal winning the court, the Women's Sport Trust said NSL enjoyed a 524% increase in TikTok views amid a push to connect with potential new fan there are issues to examine, with video assistant referee (VAR) technology worthy of ongoing Rhinos were upset when they controversially lost to Birmingham Panthers in were beaten 71-69 after extra time but felt they deserved the win in regulation time after what they believed was a two-point super shot was only credited as a one-point appeared to back up Rhinos' claims, but there was no immediate recourse without VAR, with league rules preventing the outcome of a match being altered after the event. All rather unsatisfactory, and food for thought for those pushing the sport forward.


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The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Transfer news has lost its sense of wonder and surprise in era of ‘my sources tell me …'
Which transfer fee blew your mind? It was probably Spurs signing Gazza for £2m in the summer of 1988. TWO MILLION. No one is worth that kind of money. The following year, I distinctly remember running into the living room – Spurs had just signed Gary Lineker. I was preparing for the season ahead, invisible football at my feet, commentating to myself: 'Gascoigne, to Waddle, in for LINEKERRRR.' The next moment I switched on the TV and someone (let's say Ray Stubbs) was telling me that Spurs had sold Waddle to Marseille. I was bereft. There was no warning. For me, or for Lineker it turns out. I heard the striker talking about the transfer recently on the excellent What Did You Do Yesterday? podcast hosted by David O'Doherty and generic broadcaster Max Rushden (perhaps the second-best podcast he hosts). I asked Lineker whether he was as sad as I was when Waddle left. 'I imagine I was considerably sadder. I signed for Spurs and then I went on holiday and I got the news; my agent called me and said: 'They've sold Chris Waddle to Marseille.' Honestly it was like someone stealing 15 goals from my back pocket. He was so good, so good …' This may be the most self-indulgent way to illustrate the blind beauty of transfers back then – for fans and teammates. They just appeared out of nowhere like the Dungeon Master (press the red button for other more youth-friendly references). Patrick Bernal, Hugo Lambert and I playing Championship Manager 93 on the Amiga, flicking on the radio to hear Tottenham had signed Jürgen Klinsmann. No warning. No rumours. Just bang. Klinsmann. For Cambridge United signings you had to wait for the Cambridge Evening News to see Steve Claridge's beaming face holding a scarf aloft. I was not allowed, and too square, to ring ClubCall, an 0898 number, 90p a minute, to find out whether we were selling Alan Kimble to Wimbledon. That guy recording messages from a shed on an answerphone must be sitting somewhere now thinking if only he'd been born 30 years later, he'd be earning a fortune writing 'Here We Go' on X to announce Everton's purchase of Thierno Barry. At the lower reaches of the EFL, transfers do still pop up nostalgically from nowhere. A picture of a man's face, straight to Wikipedia to find out who Ben Purrington is, and then finding a mate who supports Charlton to ask whether he's any good. Elis James still hasn't got back to me about whether the former Swansea under-21 keeper Ben Hughes can do a job between the sticks in the Vertu Trophy. At the top of the Premier League, though, with TV and radio shows hosted by professional transfer influencers, and with flight tracking of private jets, almost nothing is unknown. Either that or you just keep linking a player with every possible destination so that eventually you say the right thing. 'My understanding is …' 'I've just exchanged a message from someone close to the club.' 'All my sources tell me the player is determined to push this through.' Maybe some people with more self-control manage to ignore this stuff and watch Chris Woakes moving it perfectly off a length for hours at Edgbaston without reaching for the second screen and typing 'Eze Spurs'. New transfers are fun and exciting. But the hype machine ignores a few basic realities. There is no guarantee of it working out, even if you spend more than anyone's spent before. In fact, a cursory look at the most expensive transfers of all time suggests they are more likely to fail. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion In purely football terms – I'm not checking the shirt sales numbers – Neymar to Paris Saint-Germain for just under £200m (that's a hundred 1988 Gazzas!) didn't deliver the Champions League. Ditto Kylian Mbappé (for about £160m). The rest of the top 10: João Félix to Atleti, Enzo Fernández to Chelsea, Philippe Coutinho to Barça, Antoine Griezmann to Barça, Florian Wirtz to Liverpool, Moisés Caicedo to Chelsea, Declan Rice to Arsenal, Jack Grealish to Manchester City. Perhaps it's a little early to judge Wirtz. But with all the caveats of how you define success, how many of them have been worth the money? Or even taking the money out of it, how many have delivered consistently on the pitch? Maybe Rice is the only one? OK, Mbappé's 256 goals in 308 games seems pretty good, but … look at PSG now, look at Real Madrid now. Taking inflation into account, of course money is sometimes well spent: £80m for Ronaldo in 2009 feels like good business for Real Madrid – a few million less than United spent on Antony 13 years later . Poor Antony, always getting mentioned in these articles; he's taken a lot of the heat off Nicolas Pépé. Is it just the pressure of such a high fee? Or the fact we judge someone who cost a hundred million in a different way to someone who commands half that? Fifty million pounds still seems quite a lot for, say, Richarlison. Out of the most expensive 100 transfers of all time, if generous you could make a case that about 40 have worked out. What a terrible hit rate. Why are so many of us blind to the possibility that a new face won't work out? You've seen a seven-minute heavily edited YouTube video to early 2000s Europop. There's no way they've made Ricky van Wolfswinkel look like Kaká. He simply is just that good. There is actually a chance that someone already at your club will get better at football. Most of them train every day. It remains baffling how often a manager is praised for being able to improve players. Feels like a prerequisite. Of course relentless 24-hour coverage of existing squad players would be even less interesting than the rumour mill. 'My understanding is that Joelinton was good last year and might be good again this year.' Official club accounts making big reveal videos for a centre mid you signed three years ago may not get the numbers. But there's every chance they'll be more important this season than the guy you just signed for £30m from Strasbourg. Nevertheless, in a month or so someone will have won the transfer window. It would be great to have a life option to switch off rumour notifications, reject those cookies and select the 1988 discovery option.