
BREAKING NEWS Olympic legend Ian Thorpe loses a fortune in alleged theft
The five-time gold medal winner attended Paddington police station in the city's east to report the alleged crime, which he described as an 'insurance job', according to radio 2GB.
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BreakingNews.ie
29 minutes ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Lions chief executive says Andy Farrell in ‘strong position' to return as coach
Andy Farrell's credentials to remain British and Irish Lions head coach for the 2029 tour to New Zealand have been endorsed by chief executive Ben Calveley. Farrell has steered the Lions to their first series triumph since 2013 with Saturday's 22-12 defeat by the Wallabies in Sydney the only loss of their nine-fixture visit to Australia. Advertisement Even if their march towards the whitewash was conclusively halted at the final hurdle, the 50-year-old Ireland boss has presided over a successful tour notable for its results, squad cohesion, commitment to playing rugby and the character shown to win the second Test in the dying seconds. #Lions2025 : completed ✅ — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) August 2, 2025 Planning for 2029 is already underway with Calveley promising a similar structure and number of games to the itinerary just completed, although the final midweek fixture will be looked at closely because of the disruption it causes to Test preparations. Farrell is the favourite to lead that expedition and Calveley suggests that the most coveted post in British and Irish rugby is currently his to lose. 'Andy's done an incredible job and I have really enjoyed working with him,' Calveley said. Advertisement Ben Calveley says Andy Farrell is in a strong position to return as coach (David Davies/PA) 'I go right back to when I first met him to offer him the role. You could see right then that we had made the right decision in appointing Andy. 'Since he has started full time back in December, he has brought a real focus to the operation which has ultimately resulted in success on the field of play. We will now give him a bit of time off. 'When it comes to our appointments for future tours, we will start the process in about two years and I don't think it would be right to comment on where it ends up. But certainly he has put himself in a very strong position, let's put it that way.' Series winners, 2025 🏆🦁 #Lions2025 — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) August 2, 2025 Australia entered the series ranked eighth in the world and their credibility as an ongoing Lions tour destination was at stake before the Suncorp Stadium opener. Advertisement Their thumping in Brisbane was an inauspicious start, but at Melbourne Cricket Ground they went within 51 seconds of levelling the series before emerging emphatic winners on Saturday. The Lions won the series by an aggregate score of just 68-67 and their opponents led for more time across the three Tests. Factor in profits that are 'significantly higher than anything we've seen in the past' and it is clear that the Wallabies will continue to be adversaries for the elite of British and Irish rugby. 'I would absolutely envisage returning to Australia. I know there's been loads of speculation about whether that would be the case or not, but we've had a wonderful tour here,' Calveley said. Advertisement 'It's 100 per cent our ambition to return and we would want the next one to be bigger and better than this one.' The Lions are seen as potentially being vulnerable to the proposed new breakaway franchise league R360, but Calveley insists their pulling power remains as strong as ever. 'You have seen these quotes come from players at every stage throughout the tour is that they remain absolutely committed to the Lions,' he said. 'We all know that we have our place in the calendar baked into regulation 9 and I wouldn't see that changing in the future. Advertisement 'Our relationship with the professional game is better than it has ever been and I would see that continuing in the future.'


Telegraph
29 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Watch: English golfer hits freak hole-in-one at Women's Open
Mimi Rhodes lit up the final day of the Women's Open with a bizarre hole-in-one that featured the Englishwoman's ball deflecting off her partner's ball before dropping into the cup. MIMI RHODES WITH AN UNBELIEVABLE HOLE-IN-ONE! 🤯 — Sky Sports Golf (@SkySportsGolf) August 3, 2025 Rhodes and the Australia Stephanie Kyriacou were involved in this surreal scene on the 212-yard fifth. Kyriacou played first and her supreme effort looked destined to achieve an ace, itself, before veering away in the final rolls. Just a few inches away, the world No 42 was still booked in for a birdie though. However, with the crowd believing they had witnessed enough drama for one grouping, Rhodes, the 23-year-old from Somerset, stepped up and went pin-chasing. Rhodes's strike was just as well struck, but appeared to be going too fast. That is until it took the billiards route, checking off Kyriacou's and ricocheting into the hole. Hearing the cheers, Rhodes looked bemused before raising her arms in celebration. Kyriacou hugged her, but must have felt slightly aggrieved as, ironically, she had played the better shot. No matter, Kyriacou enjoyed her own hole-in-one on the eighth on Friday. A moment of magic ✨ Steph Kyriacou makes the first ACE of the AIG Women's Open! ⛳🤩 — Sky Sports (@SkySports) August 1, 2025 In the commentary booth, Henni Zuel, the former Tour pro, exclaimed: 'Unreal! I hope she buys Steph a nice present. Something more than a drink is deserved there.' Rhodes was being followed by at least 30 of her family and friends from Burnham & Berrow and their faith was emphatically rewarded by the Ladies European Tour rookie, who has already won three times this season. Rhodes's Royal Porthcawl heroics hauled her to four-under and within five of the leader Miyu Yamashita. The incident was reminiscent of Louis Oosthuizen's hole-in-one at the 2016 Masters. On that occasion, the South African's ball used that of JB Holmes as the canon on the 16th at Augusta and it was duly called 'the most incredible ace in major history'.


The Guardian
29 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Brisbane Lions put horror show behind them to thrive on the big stage
The last time Brisbane beat Collingwood at the MCG, Logan Morris was in year 3, Jack Crisp was a Lions player and Justin Leppitsch was his coach, and Tony Armstrong was the Magpies' leading possession winner. Current Lions coach Chris Fagan has placed a great emphasis on breaking horror streaks – an 11-game run of outs at the MCG, 15 in a row against Richmond, and two decades of losses at Kardinia Park. Their away record against Collingwood probably didn't constitute a hoodoo, but it was something that needed to be addressed, and the perfect way to right the previous week's wrongs. Brisbane were as bad as they've been for years in their defeat to Gold Coast last week. The heavy conditions disrupted their normal rhythms. They were bogged and bullied. They were Rowelled. 'It better be a one week thing,' Fagan said. This week's clash with the Pies was the biggest home and away crowd the Lions have played in front of, and they thrive on that sort of stage. The Suns aberration aside, the reigning premiers have been going through the motions a bit this year – just doing what they need to do and turning up the wick for 20-minute periods. It's as though they need the blade against their skin to really get serious. The Lions' midfielders had their pants pulled down last week. But they have a midfield that bats unusually deep, and with far too much quality and variety for the Magpies to handle. They are so crisp, so in sync, and so powerful in the way they explode from contests, spread and flock. This allowed their zig-zagging kicking game to flourish at the MCG. The Lions kick in pentagons and parallelograms – one small, one backwards, one medium, one sideways, one diagonal – all invariably inch perfect. All night, their shapes and patterns shifted the Magpies' zone and had their defenders on their wrong leg. This gave Brisbane aerial supremacy as well. With Joe Daniher screening Melbourne's calls from his hammock, Oscar McInerney banged up and Eric Hipwood still more of a decoy than anything more prominent, responsibility fell to the promising Logan Morris and Henry Smith. The latter is a big lump of a lad who has been around for a while but was playing just his fifth game. Morris is 191cm, which in this era of tall forwards constitutes an old school 'Collingwood six-footer'. The 20-year-old Morris was a handful all night for the Pies, and was particularly adept at snapping around his body, left foot or right, and at judging the pluck point of a dipping ball. He's a hard footballer to place and a hard footballer to pinpoint exactly what role he plays, where he fits in the Lions system, and who he can be compared to. But he's very good at what he does. Six weeks ago, when the Pies were several games clear of top of the ladder, Saints coach Ross Lyon hinted that they could be got at. He said it in that coded, careworn, tilted-headed, smart-ass way of his. It was his way of saying, 'I have the plan, but lack the cattle'. It was his way of saying, 'they're not as good as everyone says they are'. Collingwood certainly haven't been at their best this past month, and they looked particularly vulnerable against Brisbane. They briefly caught fire in the second term, but they were handball happy, sent too many balls sailing out on the full, and lacked the depth and grunt to go with the Lions' midfield. Most of all, the Pies looked a player or two short in defence. They're currently courting Carlton's Jack Silvagni, which warrants a column in itself. But they're desperately missing Jeremy Howe. Dan Houston has been subdued, not properly utilised and surprisingly tardy by foot so far at his new club. Sign up to From the Pocket: AFL Weekly Jonathan Horn brings expert analysis on the week's biggest AFL stories after newsletter promotion Fremantle firebrand Patrick Voss and now Morris have put half a dozen goals on them, which is a major concern with Jeremy Cameron, Riley Thilthorpe and Sam Darcy all warming up for September. Indeed, in a fortnight's time, they have a date with Adelaide – another blockbuster than won't be on free to air television – whose swaggering forwards would be licking their lips at the holes in Collingwood's backline right now. Round 21 threw up some absolute dross, the sort of games where all involved would be better off clocking off and looking ahead to 2026. But the Adelaide and Hawthorn clash was of the highest quality. There was so much at stake, with the musical chairs nature of the remaining nine contenders fully at play. The Crows have had so many jolly romps in recent months, but the game against the Hawks was a proper test. The punditariat and the locals are climbing out of trees to get onboard the Crows after they sealed a first return to the finals since the 2017 grand final. The Adelaide night was still on Friday night, but with three rounds to go, the wind is at the Crows' back.