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Squeaky bum time? How Team GB can save Winter Olympics despite slow start | Sean Ingle

about 7 hours ago
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Still the wait goes on.When Britain arrived in Milano Cortina there was heady talk of the country having one of its “most potent ever teams” for a Winter Olympics.So far, though, Team GB is still firing blanks.It is not for the want of trying.Kirsty Muir missed out on a freeski slopestyle bronze by 0.

41 points.Mia Brookes came impossibly close to making the biggest trick in Olympic big air snowboard history.While Britain’s mixed curlers, having coasted regally through the group stages, their mojo went awol when it mattered most.Less than 48 hours ago, there were high hopes for three medals on Magic Monday.Now the dominant narrative is of heartbreak and pain, tears and tales of what might have been.

No wonder Team GB’s chef de mission, Eve Muirhead, has urged everyone to “stay positive” after three fourth-place finishes in barely 24 hours.But the fact she used the phrase four times in four answers, when speaking to the media after Bruce Mouat and Jen Dodds’ bronze-medal defeat against Italy, suggested she was trying to convince herself as much as anyone else.So will it be squeaky bum time at UK Sport, which has invested £25.5m across winter sports for the 2022-26 cycle, and set a goal of four to eight medals? Not yet.Because while medal opportunities have slipped by, even more remain.

Part of that confidence comes down to believing that the variance that has gone against them so far must shift at some point,Yes, Britain expected at least one medal from the three chances they had earlier in the week,But if you spin a coin three times hoping for heads, there is still a 12,5% chance you get three tails instead,And that is what essentially happened.

As Muirhead put it on Tuesday: “We always speak about winter sports and how it comes down to absolutely nothing and I think the last couple of days has been a prime example of that, hasn’t it? Millimetres, milliseconds,But you know what, I’m really kind of, I’m positive,We are only on day four and there’s a lot of great events to come,”One longtime Team GB figure said that Muirhead’s view reflected the “realistic optimism” in the camp, with the team acknowledging the setbacks but also noting that multiple athletes had already enjoyed best ever results, including the likes of Ellia Smeding, who finished 11th in the women’s 1000m long track,More importantly, the British camp still believe they have several aces left to play.

The biggest comes in skeleton, an event where Team GB spend far more than their rivals, allowing them to have far more aerodynamic sleds and kit – a huge advantage.Think of it like Formula One.While Team GB has the equivalent of a McLaren, most of their rivals are in a Williams or Kick Sauber.Does it guarantee a place on the podium? Of course not.But it certainly doesn’t hurt their chances.

While the British team’s new helmet was banned last week, the indications from practice are enormously positive.Matt Weston – who has won five of the seven men’s World Cup races this season – has been fastest in three of the four runs so far.In the women’s event, Tabitha Stoecker has finished first in practice twice, and second on the other two runs.If sledders like Marcus Wyatt can discover their best form, it is not inconceivable that the skeleton team could get close to the lower part of UK Sport’s medal target all by themselves.The medal chances don’t end there either.

In the women’s snowboard cross, Charlotte Bankes is the favourite,Team GB’s men’s curlers, who won silver four years ago in Beijing, are the world No 1’s team according to the curling statistician Ken Pomeroy,With Britain still having Brookes going in her best event, the snowboard slopestyle, and Kirsty Muir in the freeski big air, and world champion Zoe Atkin in the freeski halfpipe, you can see why Team GB’s message is ‘don’t panic’,The hope is the comeback could start as soon as Wednesday evening when the ice dance competition reaches its denouement, with Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson in fourth place,“We need to start building a little bit of momentum and I think we definitely can do that,” Muirhead says.

“We’ve got to keep positive.” And why not, given there are still 12 days to go.
politicsSee all
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UK signed deals with US firms that were clients of Mandelson lobbying company

A lobbying firm co-owned by Peter Mandelson worked for OpenAI before the US tech company signed a wide-ranging agreement with the UK government to explore deploying AI in Britain’s justice, security and education systems.In 2024, the $500bn-valued maker of ChatGPT was a client of Global Counsel, which Mandelson co-founded and part-owned. Keir Starmer subsequently appointed Mandelson as ambassador to Washington.OpenAI last summer signed a memorandum of understanding with the UK government to develop partnerships “to expand public engagement with AI technology”.In September it signed another deal to provide 2,500 ChatGPT licences to UK civil servants, starting in the Ministry of Justice

about 7 hours ago
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Who could fill key No 10 vacancies – and win the battle for Starmer’s ear?

With three vacancies opening up at the very top of Keir Starmer’s operation, there is already a battle over who will win the war for his ear – and the direction of the government.The departure of Starmer’s most important political advisers – his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, who was focused on the fight against Reform in Labour’s working-class heartlands; and Tim Allan, the director of communication, considered a Blairite – has immediately raised hopes on Labour’s soft left of a shift in their favour.At the same time, Starmer’s decision to get rid of the bureaucratic Chris Wormald as cabinet secretary has opened the door for a more radical replacement to drive through some of the Whitehall reforms and policy changes the prime minister has been calling for.The frontrunner for cabinet secretary is understood to be Antonia Romeo, the dynamic permanent secretary of the Home Office, who has impressed Shabana Mahmood, but other possible names floated include Minouche Shafik, Starmer’s economic adviser, and Louise Casey, the lead non-executive director for the government, who has previously said she would not be suited to the job.The one thing that everyone around Starmer agrees on is that the current void in Downing Street cannot be allowed to continue for long

about 7 hours ago
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Starmer says he ‘will never walk away’ as Burnham joins Labour figures backing PM – as it happened

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about 8 hours ago
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Steady Ed conjours up a Keir in his own image – complete with fake steering wheel | John Crace

It was a day for one of the Top Team. The safest of safe hands. A grownup. That didn’t mean the likes of Emma Reynolds. Emma looks permanently startled at the best of times

about 9 hours ago
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Fighting Starmer wins another chance, but is still surrounded by peril

“Is it over?” That was the question that Labour MPs have been asking themselves and each other. But the meaning has shifted over the last 24 hours.After last Wednesday afternoon’s chaos in the Commons over the release of the Peter Mandelson documents, MPs widely believed it was the final throes of Keir Starmer’s leadership.But what looked like the start of a coup – when the Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, called for Starmer to resign – seemingly turned out to be a damp squib.When the prime minister really puts up a fight, people often see a different side to him

about 11 hours ago
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Andy Burnham backs Starmer but urges him to be bolder and more inclusive

Andy Burnham has publicly backed Keir Starmer while calling for him to show more boldness and be more willing to accept contributions from others within Labour.After a day of turmoil on Monday when the Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, called for Starmer to resign, the Greater Manchester mayor used a speech and Q&A in Westminster to call for unity while promoting his views on what the government’s platform should look like.Burnham’s intervention followed comments by the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, who used a round of morning media interviews to say Starmer should use his seemingly narrow escape from a leadership challenge to reshape his prime ministership and demonstrate “much greater clarity of purpose”.Burnham echoed the sentiment, saying it was time for everyone to be “facing in the same direction and pulling in the same direction around our ambitions”, but that the government should be more ambitious, notably on housing.“I think we are at a generational moment in politics,” he said

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Government’s top welfare official to step down

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Joy Davies obituary

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Almost 70% of NHS areas in England offer only one cycle of IVF, data shows

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