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Ireland revenge mission falls flat amid flurry of squandered chances but England march on | Sarah Rendell

about 2 hours ago
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Ireland sent out mixed messages from their camp before their game with France on Saturday: was this a revenge mission for their Rugby World Cup quarter-final exit or not? The head coach, Scott Bemand, had denied it but the captain, Erin King, admitted the World Cup game had added some “venom” to the encounter and the full-back Stacey Flood said France should be “worried if I was them”.The Irish team may have had the image of Axelle Berthoumieu biting Aoife Wafer, an action that was not caught during the quarter-final but the France back row was given a nine-game ban afterwards, for added motivation if any was needed.There was certainly no love lost between the teams, with the fixture full of tension, squabbles and huge hits.But Ireland missed the chance to land a vengeful blow on their rivals and the opportunity slipped through their fingers with three disallowed first-half tries and a missed penalty.The visitors’ inability to put daylight between themselves and France on the scoreboard allowed the hosts to take the game away from them in the final 25 minutes.

The result will leave the team and fans with a similar feeling from that quarter-final: that they should and could have won the match,It has been nine years since they got the better of France and François Ratier’s team’s 10th consecutive win over them means they are unlikely to finish higher than third in this year’s Six Nations,“The tough lesson is that when you get your chances you have to take your points,” said Bemand,“I’m incredibly proud of the effort,We know where we are heading and we just want to keep on getting better.

“You can see the girls have left everything out there and they don’t really know how to feel.This is a cauldron of fire and for 55 or 60 minutes we’ve handled it.What we have to do is go deeper in these games and see more impact when we come off the bench.”The sold-out Stade Marcel-Michelin saw more than 17,000 fans playing their part and they were deafening not only when it came to the French tries but for their defensive efforts too.One example was a superb covering tackle by the wing Anaïs Grando to hold up Fiona Tuite over the line and the crowd went wild after the referee, Clara Munarini, confirmed it was not a try.

Grando has been an impressive player for France this Six Nations with four tries in three games,She will be one for future opponents to keep an eye on, particularly England with the French looking to end the Red Roses’ stranglehold on this competition,France have not won the Six Nations in eight years but they look best placed to disrupt England’s dominance, and they were the last to beat them in the tournament back in 2018,England’s title defence is becoming more challenging with each game as their injury list continues to grow, though they are still winning matches by big margins,Sadia Kabeya came off with a shoulder and pectoral muscle injury against Wales and the head coach, John Mitchell, is having to dig into the side’s impressive depth.

If Kabeya cannot play the rest of the tournament, something that is yet to be confirmed, then they will not have to look to an inexperienced player.Instead they can call upon Kabeya’s mentor and two-time World Cup winner Marlie Packer.The former England captain played the full 80 minutes for the first time since the World Cup against Wales and put in a player of the match performance.It could be argued she would start for most other sides but the 36-year-old has fallen down the pecking order with England because of the talent pool including Kabeya and Maddie Feaunati.Packer said the team still means “everything” to her, despite the fact she has not played as much international rugby of late.

“Actually it adds a bit of nerves because the crowds are getting bigger, the expectation is getting more and more,” she said.“When you have played 114 Test matches, your first 10, 15 you are nervous, the ones in between you really enjoy and now the latter end of my Tests I do get a bit more nervous because it means so much.“Every training session, every time you are out there with the girls, you don’t know when it is going to be your last.”Packer and the rest of the England squad will play Italy on 9 May when the tournament returns after the upcoming fallow week.France will play Scotland before the likely grand slam decider in Le Crunch a week later.

England’s attack is lauded but the ferocious French defence is what could win them the title, to loosely quote Sir Alex Ferguson.France made 240 tackles and missed only 14 of them against Ireland, giving them a tackle success rate of 94%.All roads may point towards England lifting the trophy again but if France can maintain the defensive intensity they had against Ireland the silverware could be within reach.Ireland were the team looking for an upset in the tournament with a win over France but now it will be the French themselves who have a chance to deliver a statement win against the Red Roses.If they can do it, it would send shockwaves through the tournament.

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Britain is undermining the care workers it depends on | Heather Stewart

“We are deflated, we are sad. We feel the government is trying to pull the rug from under our feet,” says David. “It is like we are being criticised for working in a sector which the government called for us to come help with.”David – not his real name – is a care worker for adults with learning disabilities. He came to the east of England from Nigeria in 2022 with his wife as the Conservative government turned to migration to tackle the social care recruitment crisis

about 23 hours ago
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Suicide-related callouts to fire services triple in England in a decade

Suicide-related callouts to fire and rescue services in England have tripled in the last decade, with Samaritans now calling for mandatory training for firefighters, who they say are struggling to deal with the increase in traumatic incidents.New figures show that fire services in England attended 3,250 suicide callouts in the year ending September 2025, the equivalent to 62 callouts a week. This was up from 997 callouts in 2009-10 when records began.Samaritans said firefighters were often among the first on the scene when someone was in suicidal crisis, and despite having to make rapid, life-saving decisions, received no formal mandatory training on how to intervene.Elliot Colburn, public affairs and campaigns manager at the charity, said: “People with this experience are telling us they don’t feel equipped with the training on dealing with someone in suicidal crisis

1 day ago
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From syringes to stents: Iran war exposes NHS dependency on petrochemicals

The war in Iran has put the NHS on high alert amid fears about looming shortages and rising costs for medicines and medical products such as syringes, intravenous bags and gloves.Much of modern healthcare is dependent on the petrochemicals now held up by the Gulf shipping standstill – whether for active pharmaceutical ingredients or to produce the millions of sterile single-use items, ranging from personal protective equipment (PPE) to catheters and diagnostic-device casings.The NHS is one of the biggest healthcare bulk buyers in the world. It spends £8bn a year on equipment and consumables, from latex gloves and paper towels to stents and prosthetic hips. Its bill for medicines was £21

1 day ago
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Safety fears as UK hospitals use nurses to cover for doctors due to shortage of medics

UK hospitals are using nurses to cover for doctors because of an NHS-wide shortage of medics, raising fears that “substitute doctors” may provide inferior care.Health professionals known as advanced practitioners – who are mainly senior nurses – are undertaking roles usually performed by doctors in A&E, neonatal units, critical care and other areas.Almost half of hospitals in the UK are deploying APs to cover gaps in doctors’ rotas, according to figures obtained by the British Medical Association under freedom of information laws from NHS trusts in England and health boards in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.The BMA warned that the widespread use of “non-doctors” in medical roles is “simply not safe” and may be driven by hospitals using staff who are cheaper than doctors to save money.Its revelations follow a number of cases in which mistakes in either diagnosis or treatment by APs led to patients being harmed or dying

2 days ago
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How the Walsall rapist John Ashby exposed his misogyny rapping online

John Ashby is a man who did not hide his hatred of women.In fact, the rapist, who was sentenced this week to life in prison with a minimum of 14 years for a racially motivated sex attack on a Sikh woman, vented his misogyny online for all to see.Publicly available videos uploaded to YouTube show Ashby, 32, rapping about hitting women. “I’d fight any bitch, don’t give a fuck. You cheeky bitch want to get slapped up, what?” he says

2 days ago
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Mother ends life at Swiss clinic four years after son’s death

A grieving mother has ended her life at a clinic in Switzerland four years after the death of her only child.Wendy Duffy, 56, a physically healthy woman, died at the Pegasos clinic in Basel after struggling to cope with the death of her 23-year-old son, Marcus.The former care worker, from the West Midlands, had previously attempted to take her own life.The case comes as assisted dying will not become law in England and Wales after proposed legislation, branded “hopelessly flawed” by opponents, ran out of time.Ruedi Habegger, the founder of Pegasos, described Duffy’s death as a “sane suicide”

3 days ago
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UK urged to deploy EU-style ‘trade bazooka’ against Trump’s tariffs

about 12 hours ago
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Royal Mail investigating claims that postal worker ‘binned Reform UK election leaflets’

about 16 hours ago
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Greggs rolls back self-service cabinets in shoplifting hotspots

about 17 hours ago
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Bosses don’t like the sound of a ‘four-day workweek’. Maybe it’s time to rebrand it

about 19 hours ago
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Ryanair to shut Berlin base as it blames rise in German aviation tax

about 20 hours ago
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NatWest faces AGM showdown over ‘climate backtracking’

about 22 hours ago