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Team GB’s best chance of Winter Olympics gold dealt major blow after helmets ban

about 3 hours ago
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Great Britain’s best hopes of gold at these Winter Olympics have suffered a setback after skeleton’s governing body banned its new aerodynamic helmets for being the wrong shape.Team GB’s Matt Weston and Marcus Wyatt have dominated skeleton all season, winning all seven of the World Cup races, and making them strong favourites to win gold and silver here in Milan.But they were hoping to increase their chances of glory even further in Milan-Cortina with a new helmet.Yet having trialled it in San Moritz last week, it has now emerged that the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation quickly banned the helmets on 29 January, saying they “did not comply with the IBSF skeleton rules based on its shape”.Team GB have now appealed the decision to the court of arbitration for sport, arguing the design and manufacture of the helmet meets rigorous safety standards.

The appeal will be heard on Thursday, with the verdict expected on Friday.Weston and Wyatt will compete on 12 and 13 February.UK Sport has pumped £5,765,123 of National Lottery funding into skeleton sliders over the past four years, and has been rewarded with Weston in particular dominating the sport.Last year he became world champion for a second time, beating his closest rival Wyatt by 1.9secs.

While this season, Weston has won five races and Wyatt two.Speaking just before the Games, UK Sport’s performance director Kate Baker had admitted Team GB had been using new tech in the buildup, especially in skeleton and bobsleigh, and had been using their own wind tunnel to improve performance.“Critically, what’s exciting about the way that the skeleton and bobsleigh programme are now working is that they are fully integrated together,” she said.“They used to be separate programmes.They’re now overseen by the same performance director, Nat Dunman.

She has overseen an integrated research and investment programme which has brought some real fruit, as you will see from the performances that we’re already producing,”Asked whether technical upgrades are deliberately held back for the Olympics, Baker added: “Historically, you could turn up at the Games and you could just pull out a totally brand new kit set-up, send the athletes out on it, and they’d suddenly find seconds.You just can’t do that any more.”She added: “Our innovation team at the UK Sports Institute works with a number of critical partners.Whether those are related to Formula One or related to cycling, we now have, which is a unique position for us, our own wind tunnel which we can get into and test consistently, which we are doing with our skeleton athletes.”This is not the first time that the Great Britain’s skeleton team has been the subject of controversy on the eve of a Winter Olympics.

In 2018, the Guardian reported that other teams had raised eyebrows that they were using custom-made aerodynamic suits that provided a “massive” improvement on the conventional ones.However, the suits were declared legal by the IBSF.
societySee all
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Council and community could join up on housing | Letters

John Harris is absolutely right to draw attention to the tragic lack of council housing provision in the UK, and his visit to the new homes at Rainbow Way in Minehead, Somerset, is a welcome reminder that building genuinely affordable, secure homes is both possible and transformational for people’s lives (In Somerset, I found glorious proof that England can build great council houses. So what is holding us back?, 25 January). The emotional testimony from residents who now have stability and dignity in their housing reinforces how urgently we need similar projects across the country.However, my own experience working on the East Quay project in the adjacent town of Watchet reinforced another uncomfortable truth: local authorities do not always have the will or imagination to take the initiative and improve things for their residents.In Watchet, it was not the local council that led progressive change, but a remarkable community group, the Onion Collective

1 day ago
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Resident doctors in England vote to continue industrial action for another six months

Resident doctors in England have voted to strike for another six months in their long-running jobs and pay dispute with the government.Their decision means that, unless an agreement emerges, the campaign of strikes by resident – formerly junior – doctors will enter its fourth year, as the industrial action began in March 2023.The British Medical Association (BMA) said 93% of the resident doctors who voted in their latest strike ballot endorsed holding a further series of stoppages. In all, 26,696 of the 28,598 resident doctors who took part backed continuing industrial action – a 53% turnout.The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) highlighted that this was the lowest turnout yet seen in the five strike ballots held as part of the action

2 days ago
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Lack of mental health beds contributed to UK teenager’s death, inquest finds

A shortage of mental health beds and poor communication between agencies contributed to the death of a teenage girl on hospital grounds, an inquest has found.Ellame Ford-Dunn, 16, who had a history of self-harm, died in March 2022 after absconding from an acute children’s ward where she had been put because of a dearth of appropriate mental health beds.Her family and campaigners say Ellame’s death exposed a mental health system “crumbling at the seams”.The inquest jury at West Sussex coroner’s court was told that Ellame absconded “multiple times” during her stay at Worthing hospital’s Bluefin ward, which was not a specialist mental health unit.Jurors concluded the decision to place Ellame there was “inappropriate” and “more than minimally” contributed to her death

2 days ago
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Here’s how we can save Britain’s high streets | Letters

High streets have been changing throughout my lifetime (I’m 82 and had a high-street business for more than 20 years) and they have somehow survived with precious little government help (Labour risks election wipeout unless it improves Britain’s high streets, study finds, 28 February). In my postwar rural Essex village, we had three butchers, two newsagents, two bakers, two ironmongers, three general stores (one a dairy) plus a potpourri of haberdashery, hair stylists, two sweet shops and an electrical shop that had every plug and wire known to man.There was consternation when the dairy went self-service, but soon everyone was shopping with a basket. Then came the grocery chains – the butchers and bakers disappeared, and the main haberdasher closed. But the village adjusted and other enterprises appeared

2 days ago
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‘Menopause gold rush’? Boom in hi-tech products as stigma starts to recede

For any bodily function you want to measure these days there is a gadget – a wristband for step-counting, a watch to track your heart rate or a ring for measuring sleep.Now the march of wearable tech is coming to the aid of what some say is a long underserved market: menopausal women.One startup has recently launched a high-end cooling bracelet that kicks into action during a menopausal hot flush. The device is one of a growing number of lifestyle products being launched in this area, which some experts say is growing as stigma around menopause recedes. Companies are developing everything from apps offering dietary advice to devices that track symptoms, hormones and body temperature

3 days ago
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On Polymarket, ‘privileged’ users made millions betting on war strikes and diplomatic strategy. What did they know beforehand?

In the early hours of 13 June, more than 200 Israeli fighter jets began pummeling Iran with bombs, lighting up the Tehran skyline and initiating a 12-day war that would leave hundreds dead.But for one user of the prediction market Polymarket, it was their lucky day. In the 24 hours before the strike occurred, they had bet tens of thousands of dollars on “yes” on the market “Israel military action against Iran by Friday?” when the prospect still seemed unlikely and odds were hovering at about 10%. After the strike, Polymarket declared that military action had been taken, and paid the user $128,000 for their lucky wager.But was it just luck?Polymarket is an online platform where people can bet on just about anything, from what the most-streamed song on Spotify will be to how many times Donald Trump will say “terrible” that day

5 days ago
technologySee all
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From ‘nerdy’ Gemini to ‘edgy’ Grok: how developers are shaping AI behaviours

1 day ago
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UK privacy watchdog opens inquiry into X over Grok AI sexual deepfakes

1 day ago
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Anthropic’s launch of AI legal tool hits shares in European data companies

1 day ago
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Disastrous start for US TikTok as users cry censorship

1 day ago
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‘Deepfakes spreading and more AI companions’: seven takeaways from the latest artificial intelligence safety report

1 day ago
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Palantir beats Wall Street expectations amid Trump immigration crackdown

1 day ago