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ITV News
21 minutes ago
- ITV News
ITV scores biggest audience of the year with Lionesses UEFA Women's EUROS victory
ITV's coverage of England v Italy on Tuesday night was watched by a peak of 10.2 million across all devices, giving ITV its biggest peak audience of 2025 across ITV1 and ITVX. The match averaged 8 million viewers across all devices, from kick off until the final whistle, delivering ITV's biggest audience amongst all adults and the 16-34 demographic for overnight ratings for the year so far. England's victory on Tuesday night is also ITVX's biggest day this year with 17.2m streams. The Lionesses victory over Italy will see them progress to the final of the UEFA Women's EUROS this Sunday 27th July on ITV1, ITVX, STV and STV Player from 3:30pm. ITV's line-up on Sunday will be led by Laura Woods, who is joined in the studio in Basel by Ian Wright, Emma Hayes and Karen Carney. ITV's package of coverage includes social platforms @ITVFootball on X, Facebook and Instagram and @ITVSport on TikTok and YouTube, ensuring fans will not miss a single minute of the action.


The Guardian
21 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Yorkshire v Surrey, Sussex v Essex, and more: county cricket day two
Update: Date: 2025-07-23T12:19:21.000Z Title: DIVISION ONE Content: Updates from day two of the latest Championship games England v India – follow it live | Email Tanya or post BTL Tanya Aldred at Cheltenham Wed 23 Jul 2025 14.19 CEST First published on Wed 23 Jul 2025 11.17 CEST 2.19pm CEST 14:19 Southampton: Hampshire v Nottinghamshire 387-6 Taunton: Somerset 250 v Durham 145 and 152-7 Hove: Sussex 204 v Essex 301-4 Edgbaston: Warwickshire 16-3 v Worcestershire 333 Scarborough: Yorkshire 292-4 v Surrey Play has just started after a weather delay. DIVISION TWO Derby: Derbyshire 6-1 v Leicestershire 398 Sophia Gardens: Glamorgan 250-5 v Kent 155 Cheltenham: Gloucestershire v Lancashire 415-8 Merchant Taylors' School: Middlesex 479-5 v Northamptonshire 2.11pm CEST 14:11 A fabulous morning for Lancashire, Green and Hartley, 98 and 53 not out respectively, walk off to warm applause from the crowd, who start to wander onto the pitch. Lunchtime scores to follow. 2.06pm CEST 14:06 After yesterday's 22 wicket day, five more this morning at Taunton as Rob Key's spin-dream is acted out by Jack Leach (4-50) and Archie Vaughan (3-59). Durham 149-7, lead by 44. 2.00pm CEST 14:00 Gloucestershire are said to have one of the fastest attacks on the circuit – and Singh-Dale gives Hartley a working over here. Sadly (for the club, not the players), he, Akhter and Archie Bailey may be ploughing a different furrow next season. And after Leicestershire lost seven wickets this morning, Derbyshire follow suit – David Lloyd bowled by Ian Holland for 0. 1.49pm CEST 13:49 England's man on the sidelines with another stellar century – Essex 277-4. Lancashire pass four hundred, the partnership between Hartley and Green now 102. More from Stephen Chalke – nine Gloucestershire players are out of contract this year and have been able to talk to other counties since June. And he once saw Graeme Hick hit six over the top of the pavilion, which is some feat. 1.42pm CEST 13:42 Just had a lovely chat with Stephen Chalke, who is interviewing Ashley Giles in the hub marquee about his new book - The King of Spain and I. He says it is a fascinating read. 1.25pm CEST 13:25 Play will start at one o'clock at North Marine Road. 1.20pm CEST 13:20 Louis Kimber and Ian Holland have bucked the feast or famine trend by being out for two and eight at The County Ground, Hill finally removed for 151. Leics: 394-7, a good fight back by Derby. If you're wondering why there is no news from Scarborough, bad weather has postponed any play this morning. And here is a fascinating read by Kaushik Rangarajan on why willow production is under threat. 1.13pm CEST 13:13 I love festival cricket, as I passed the pavilion kitchen, an adorable black dog padded out to be stroked. Along the outside of the ground, next to the luxury portaloos, are a line of black poplar trees, planted to commemorate the achievements of old alumni – eg, Duleep Singh's seven for 35 against Marlborough in 1921. But the tree planted by the PG Wodehouse Society in 2016 to commemorate the death of Percy Jeeves (the inspiration for the fictional valet) on the Somme looks a little worse for wear. If there are any society members out there, it might be worth a check. 12.57pm CEST 12:57 Hmm, suddenly feeling slightly vulnerable on this balcony as Hartley takes his turn to whallop Singh-Dale for six. Divine protection from the parasol, maybe. 12.53pm CEST 12:53 Chris Green sweeps successive sixes into the crowd dozing by the pavilion, suddenly shrinking the ground to the size of a hankerchief. Green reaches fifty following the loss of overnight partner Hurst and then Blatherwick in quick succession 📸 12.43pm CEST 12:43 Applause rattles around the ground for Chris Green's fifty, which he acknowledges with a little wave of the right glove. Todd Murphy wheels through over number 30. 12.39pm CEST 12:39 A cracking innings against his old club. Worcs 291-8, an excellent effort from 196-6. Updated at 12.40pm CEST 12.36pm CEST 12:36 ..and will rejoin Notts midway through their game against Hampshire. 12.33pm CEST 12:33 An excellent mid-summer fillip for Middlesex. A century for Williamson in his first first-class match for the club. Modest and brilliant. Middlesex 356-1, the second-wicket partnership an unbroken 235. First Rothesay County Championship match for Middlesex, first Middlesex century for Kane Williamson. Updated at 12.45pm CEST 12.17pm CEST 12:17 He tucks that one run neatly into his pocket, for his 28th first-class century. But now he's out, for 101 – a second wicket for Chappell – Leicestershire 361-4. Updated at 12.17pm CEST 12.13pm CEST 12:13 Vic Marks promised to update the blog on the pitch at Taunton. In the meantime, here is six-wicket Craig Overton dampening down speculation. 'The pitch did a bit all day, but not too much, as was shown when the batters applied themselves. 'There were 400 runs scored in the day, which suggests it wasn't a minefield. 'It turned a little, but again I don't think it was excessive. There was some very mediocre cricket played with the bat, which was perhaps a hangover from playing T20 cricket in recent weeks. 'Tom Lammonby played wonderfully well and showed that if you committed to your shots and tried to stick around runs could be made.' 12.11pm CEST 12:11 And Lancs lose another, Ollie Price hanging onto a skier from Jack Baltherwick (1), that could have been easily misjudged. Lancs 302-8. 12.09pm CEST 12:09 If I was rubbing my hand's together in Kyle Abbot's slip cordon, I might be a little nervous. 'The dropped catches are incredibly frustrating. It hasn't been good enough,' he told the reporters network yesterday. 'It takes a toll on the bowling group when you've put in three overs at a batter then change your line for one. There is a whole build up for those and then you are back to square one.' 12.03pm CEST 12:03 Here come the umpires, centurion Matty Hurst and BTL man-crush Chris Green, who plays an immaculate defensive shot to van Buuren, long leg half way down the pitch. And oh, Matty Hurst has just been caught, head almost down to his belly button, he crawls off the pitch. 11.55am CEST 11:55 A 101-over day here at Cheltenham, where Lancashire are practising their slip catching and a nifty little mower pulls away the temporary nets from the outfield, off behind the sightscreen and into the car park. A healthy line of spectators, cushions in hand, marched past the handsome buildings with their iron-wrought balconies, past the park with its summer art exhibition, and into the college grounds. 11.29am CEST 11:29 An excellent, and sad, read on West Indies cricket by Taha in this week's Spin. 11.25am CEST 11:25 Daniel Harris with all the doings from an overcast Old Trafford. 11.17am CEST 11:17 The sandy-stoned gorgeousness of Cheltenham college, the white hospitality tents full of bonhomie and beer – it wasn't long ago that the world's longest-running cricket festival was a healthy homage to the county game. But times have changed, and Gloucestershire lost £80,000 at last year's festival, and a similar amount the year before. The future looks uncertain, but the 2,400 who came through the gate saw an intriguing day on a butterscotch outfield, that largely dodged the menacing dishwasher clouds that swung in from the north west. Lancashire's Matty Hurst reached his hundred to a enthusiastic round of applause, after holding the innings together against the off-spin of Todd Murphy, the zippy Zaman Akhter (four for 64) and Ajeet Singh Dale, who, festival rumour has it, is off to Old Trafford at the end of the season. Kane Williamson enjoyed his red-ball debut for Middlesex, with an unbeaten 88 against Northamptonshire, a cameo companion to Max Holden's 137 – his third hundred of the summer. An eyebrow raising 22 wickets fell at Taunton, and in a Kookaburra round as well. Craig Overton hustled Durham out for 145, with six for 23; before George Drissell returned the favour for Durham, with five for 59. Tom Lammonby helped Somerset to 250, giving Durham just time to lose two wickets in the three overs before stumps. Spectators at Sophia Gardens watched an epic Kent collapse – six wickets for seven runs against Glamorgan, while at Scarborough, Yorkshire's top four kept top of the table Surrey at bay, despite the unavailability of their new signing Imam-Ul-Haq, with visa issues. There were three wickets for Dan Worrall. Rehan Ahmed danced to his third consecutive century, from 118 balls, as Leicestershire bloomed from a sub-optimal nought for two after eight balls against Derbyshire. Lewis Hill was unbeaten on 132 at stumps, while Peter Handscomb perched on 99. Essex had one of their better days of 2025, ushering Sussex out for 204, the clockwork Jamie Porter (four for 40) and Sam Cook reunited. Ethan Brookes' 80 against his old club kept Worcestershire in the hunt against Warwickshire at Edgbaston. Freddie McCann and Jack Haynes pocketed half centuries for Nottinghamshire on an emerald pitch against Hampshire at Southampton. Updated at 11.22am CEST 11.17am CEST 11:17 Southampton: Hampshire v Nottinghamshire 241-5 Taunton: Somerset 250 v Durham 145 and 5-2 Hove: Sussex 204 v Essex 152-4 Edgbaston: Warwickshire v Worcestershire 262-8 Scarborough: Yorkshire 282-4 v Surrey DIVISION TWO Derby: Derbyshire v Leicestershire 357-3 Sophia Gardens: Glamorgan 125-4 v Kent 155 Cheltenham: Gloucestershire v Lancashire 290-6 Merchant Taylors' School: Middlesex 319-1 v Northamptonshire Updated at 11.22am CEST 11.17am CEST 11:17 Hello! On my morning walk I was surprised to find myself dawdling past GCHQ, then accidentally bought the most expensive glass of overnight oats in Cheltenham. Play starts here, and at the Test, at 11am – gather round the fripperies box and join us.


The Independent
21 minutes ago
- The Independent
India openers make strong start after England opt to bowl first in fourth Test
England found no joy after Ben Stokes opted to bowl first in overcast conditions on a quiet first session of the fourth Rothesay Test against India. Tensions between the teams had risen after a tetchy final couple of days at Lord's, where England won to take a 2-1 series lead, but the dial was turned down a notch after England elected to bowl first. Shubman Gill calling incorrectly was India's 14th straight loss at the toss, with the odds of that happening 16,384 to one, but Yashasvi Jaiswal and KL Rahul enjoyed more fortune when play began at a murky Emirates Old Trafford. India's openers guided them to 78 without loss at lunch, with Jaiswal in particular riding his luck following Chris Woakes' probing eight-over spell. Woakes repeatedly challenged the outside edge but the only breakthrough the veteran seamer managed was snapping the Indian's bat handle. Jaiswal started to find some fluency before the interval, and was on 36 not out after uppercutting Stokes for six, while Rahul was altogether more compact in compiling an unbeaten 40. Jaiswal's outside edge was found twice in the first over but neither carried to the slips and the second trickled past the cordon for a streaky four, leaving Woakes kicking the turf in frustration. Woakes in particular gave Jaiswal a thorough working-over but the young left-hander showed good judgment outside his off-stump even if several deliveries whistled past his outside edge. Jofra Archer leaked just seven runs in an opening five-over burst but was not as threatening as Woakes, who thudded into Jaiswal's bat handle, breaking it and leading to the only sustained break in play. Brydon Carse was wayward and was carved on a couple of occasions by Rahul, although when Jaiswal attempted to do likewise, an uppish edge flew past the outstretched hand of Zak Crawley at third slip. Jaiswal was rushed by an Archer shorter ball and what seemed like an initial leave was ramped for four, leaving the bowler to smile wryly. The batter, though, was at his brilliant best when flashing hard at Stokes as the ball flew over the deep backward point boundary to rubberstamp India's excellent start.