Treylon Burks’ one-handed miracle catch draws comparisons to Odell Beckham’s Giants grab

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Odell Beckham’s Jr’s miracle grab in 2014 may remain the best NFL catch this century, but Treylon Burks’ effort on Sunday pushes it close.During the third-quarter of Sunday’s game between the Commanders and Broncos, the Washington receiver reached behind him as he fell backwards in the end zone and grabbed a Marcus Mariota pass with his right hand.He secured the ball as he fell to the turf and his touchdown tied the game at 13-13.This article includes content hosted on embed.bsky.

app.We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as the provider may be using cookies and other technologies.To view this content, click 'Allow and continue'.The catch was reminiscent of Beckham’s catch for the Giants in 2014, which also game on NBC’s Sunday Night Football broadcast.However, that catch – which also resulted in a touchdown – came via a longer pass.

Beckham was one of the first to praise Burks,“13 13,” he wrote on X, a reference to the jersey number the two receivers share,Burks’ touchdown was just the second of his four-year NFL career,The Tennessee Titans selected him in the first-round of the 2022 draft but he was released by the team earlier this season and was generally viewed as a bust,He was only added to the Commanders’ active roster after an injury to Luke McCaffrey.

Burks’ grab was not the only brilliant one-handed catch on Sunday,Brock Bowers dove low to snag a touchdown for the Raiders in their loss to the Chargers,
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Illegal weight-loss drugs being sold in UK by firms with high Trustpilot scores

Companies selling illegal weight-loss drugs are amassing positive Trustpilot reviews as critics say regulatory gaps allow high-risk operators to appear credible.A Guardian investigation found that Retatrutide UK had a score of 4.4 on the global review site, despite purporting to offer a drug that is unlicensed and illegal to sell or buy. Its website sells a 20mg retatrutide pen for £132.It is among a number of operators promoting themselves on the review website to appear legitimate

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Failure to diagnose treatable male infertility leading to unnecessary IVF, experts say

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‘It was soul destroying’: men on the struggle to get answers about infertility

After six years of trying for a baby and two failed rounds of IVF, Toby Trice found himself at his “lowest ebb”, feeling “lost, lonely and alienated from society”.“We were in this dark phase of not knowing where we were at. All our friends and family around us had children and we were constantly reminded we couldn’t. It was soul-destroying.“After the second round of IVF – and hope was ripped away from us – I had suicidal thoughts

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Lessons not learned after Georgia Barter driven to suicide by abuse, says her mother

The family of a woman judged to have been unlawfully killed by her partner after she took her own life following years of domestic abuse has said “lessons have still not been learnt” after the government indicated it would not make changes to how officers use the police national database.An inquest earlier this year found that Georgia Barter, 32, experienced years of abuse at the hands of Thomas Bignell.The inquest, in Walthamstow, London, heard that even though Bignell was known to at least four police forces, officers were not always able to access information about previous reports or arrests on the police national database (PND) when they were called out to attend to incidents involving Barter.When he was arrested in relation to alleged assaults on her, the inquest heard that officers did not appear to have either the capacity or the authorisation to check the database.The hearing was told that the Metropolitan police and Essex police received multiple reports about Bignell’s alleged abuse of Barter, including a report from a member of the public who told Essex police that Bignell had threatened to kill her

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‘We’ve got to listen to dead women’: critical part of Queensland’s DV response stops reviewing all recent deaths

The Queensland advisory board tasked with reviewing domestic and family violence deaths has quietly stopped routinely analysing new cases, and has not looked into most of the latest deaths for more than two years.Guardian Australia’s Broken trust investigation has uncovered evidence and allegations that raise concern about the way the coronial system investigates women’s deaths and the accuracy of Queensland’s DFV statistics.Coroners have repeatedly made rulings that nothing more could have been done to prevent homicides, in the face of evidence of serious policing and system failures that have contributed to women’s deaths and the mounting toll.Queensland’s Domestic and Family Violence Death Review and Advisory Board is considered a “critical” part of the state’s response to domestic and family violence. Its aim is to “prevent future avoidable deaths”

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What has happened since the UK supreme court’s gender ruling?

In April, the supreme court ruled in a long-running case against the Scottish government brought by gender critical campaigners For Women Scotland (FWS). The landmark judgment said that, for the purposes of the Equality Act, the legal definition of a woman was based on biological sex. We look at what has happened since the ruling.The judgment has significant ramifications for who can now access women-only services and spaces, such as refuges or toilets, but most public bodies, businesses and other service providers are still waiting for an updated code of practice from the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), which will offer practical guidance on how to apply the ruling.A few companies, such as Barclays, moved quickly to bar transgender people from using toilets of their lived gender, as did Virgin Active, after a legal threat this summer