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When curlers need snookers: Team GB fight on at Winter Olympics after day of drama

about 4 hours ago
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These are strained days at the curling arena, where the chances of the two British teams are teetering like a bus full of bullion that’s backed over the lip of a cliff.Both the men and women ended up in a position where they need to win every game they play and hope other results go their way to have any chance of making the semi-finals.Curling is one of the very few sports left being contested at the Winter Olympics in which the British fancy their chances, and Team GB’s hopes of getting anywhere near their medal target will turn on the curl of the stones in the next few days.Hang on a minute lads, anyone got a bright idea? “Play better,” the British skip Bruce Mouat told his team.The Brits had three matches between them on Wednesday.

It started just before nine in the morning with the first instalment of a double bill against USA – the women, then the men playing them – and was finished just before nine in the evening, with the conclusion of the women’s match against Japan.Team GB needed to win all three of them, and they did, in 12 hours of excruciating slow‑mo sport, as tense as the seat of a skip’s pants as they slide down the ice to deliver the hammer.There were some extraordinary moments in among it, the best of them Becky Morrison’s 15th, and very final stone, of the 10th end against USA.Morrison’s team were trailing 7-6, USA had the hammer and a stone sitting flush on the button.There was only one possible shot Morrison could play to save the day, an improbable hit-and-roll which ricocheted off a stone sitting way out to the left, shot across the ice and knocked the USA stone off and stopped dead.

It was a two-point swing, and the stunned USA team were still talking about it hours later.Minnesota Fats couldn’t have worked the angles any better.“It’s up there with the best stones I’ve ever thrown, for sure, especially considering the situation,” Morrison said.“One of the best stones I’ve ever seen,” her teammate Sophie Sinclair said.Their third, Jen Dodds, said: “What a way to finish the game.

I’ve got a bit of adrenaline going, because it was so amazing to watch.That is a very high tariff shot.You’re aiming at a third of the stone, and it’s way out there on a line you don’t really play often, in the 10th end of an Olympic Games, to keep your chances alive.”And the fun was only just beginning.The British men beat USA 9-2 after just six ends.

The problem was they don’t just need to win; they need the Norwegian and Italian teams to lose, too.Whenever Mouat and his teammates weren’t focused entirely on their own game, they had both eyes on what was happening on rinks either side.It was like the final day of the Premier League, only they were playing all the games in the same stadium.When Britain were two up against USA, Norway were trailing the Swiss by the same margin, but Italy were leading Canada by three.Then when the British were leading by six, Canada had come back to one‑down in their match against Italy, but all of a sudden the Norwegians had equalised with Switzerland.

Somehow at the end of it all, everything fell the right way,Canada came back to beat Italy 8-3, and the Swiss pulled ahead again to beat Norway 10-4,Now, the British have to spend Thursday morning watching while Norway play Canada, and Italy play Switzerland,As long as one of Norway or Italy lose, GB will go through,And if you followed that here’s a Rubik’s Cube for you to do.

“I’ll be literally refreshing my phone every 20 seconds,” said Hammy McMillan, who will be following it from the athletes’ village.The British women will be back at the rink.They beat Japan 9-3 in the evening, and now need to defeat Italy on Friday afternoon.Mouat, crawling ever so slowly towards the back of that wobbling bus, says only: “I’m actually oddly calm.I feel like things are going to go our way.

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businessSee all
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As real wage growth falls again, Australian workers must feel the economy is rigged against them | Greg Jericho

In 2025 wages grew slower than inflation, which means that wages clearly are not the cause of rising prices. Not only have workers seen their purchasing power decline, but the RBA’s decision to raise interest rates has once again punished them for inflation that was not their fault.Before I go any further, excuse me while I go to the calendar and mark off yet another three months without a wage breakout. It’s a ritual I have been able to do my entire working life.There hasn’t been a wage breakout since I was in primary school but do not worry – the RBA is still on the watch, ever on alert to raise interest rates in an effort to increase unemployment and lower wage growth

about 12 hours ago
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Miner Glencore to give $2bn to shareholders despite profit slump

Glencore is to give $2bn (£1.47bn) to shareholders after a turbulent year in which profits slumped and talks collapsed over a blockbuster $260bn merger with the fellow mining company Rio Tinto.The FTSE 100 company announced the payout on Wednesday despite reporting that annual profits slipped 6% on the previous year to $13.5bn.It comes weeks after talks over what would have been the largest deal in mining history collapsed, leaving the Swiss-headquartered commodities company to press ahead with a plan to more than double its copper production over the next decade

about 17 hours ago
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UK inflation falls to 3%, boosting hopes of early cut in interest rates

UK inflation tumbled to 3% in January, giving a boost to hopes of an early cut in interest rates by the Bank of England.The slowdown was in line with a majority of City economists’ forecasts and marks the lowest level since March 2025.The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said that falls in petrol prices, air fares and food had driven the drop.In a welcome boost for households’ shopping budgets, the rise in prices for food and non-alcoholic drinks slowed sharply to 3.6% in the year to January, down from 4

about 19 hours ago
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US and Japan unveil $36bn of oil, gas and critical minerals projects in challenge to China

Japan has drawn up plans for investments in US oil, gas and critical mineral projects worth about $36bn under the first wave of a deal with Donald Trump.The US president and Sanae Takaichi, Japan’s prime minister, announced a trio of projects including a power plant in Portsmouth, Ohio, billed by the Trump administration as the largest natural gas-fired generating facility in US history.As a diplomatic row between Japan and China over the security of Taiwan continues, testing the Japanese economy, Takaichi said the projects would strengthen her country’s ties with the US.While Takaichi did not directly mention China, she expressed hope in a statement that the investments would enhance Japanese and US economic security.“Our massive trade deal with Japan has just launched,” Trump declared in a social media post

about 20 hours ago
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The death of Heather Preen: how an eight-year-old lost her life amid sewage crisis

In 1999, Heather Preen contracted E coli on a Devon beach. Two weeks later she died. Now, as a new Channel 4 show dramatises the scandal, her mother, Julie Maughan, explains why she is still looking for someone to take responsibilityWhen Julie Maughan was invited to help with a factual drama that would focus on the illegal dumping of raw sewage by water companies, she had to think hard. In some ways, it felt 25 years too late. In 1999, Maughan’s eight-year-old daughter, Heather Preen, had contracted the pathogen E coli O157 on a Devon beach and died within a fortnight

about 21 hours ago
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Boost to British Steel as Turkey places high-speed rail order

British Steel has secured an order worth tens of millions of pounds to supply rail for a high-speed electric railway in Turkey, amid continuing uncertainty over the long-term future of the government-controlled steelworks in Scunthorpe.The site will supply 36,000 tonnes of rail to ERG International Group, the company announced, in what it called an “eight-figure agreement”.The rail is destined for a 599km railway line being built to connect the Turkish capital, Ankara, with the western port city of İzmir, which will reduce the travel time and cut carbon emissions.British Steel said securing the contract had allowed it to create 23 new roles at the north Lincolnshire site and to restart round-the-clock rail manufacturing for the first time in more than a decade.The deal, which was supported by UK Export Finance, is seen as a commercial boost for the loss-making manufacturer

1 day ago
sportSee all
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Soft toys and a jagged edge: how Russia is circling the Winter Olympics

about 9 hours ago
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‘My DNA is in this car’: Lewis Hamilton revved up for Ferrari in new F1 season

about 11 hours ago
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Very good dog invades course but falls short of medal glory at Winter Olympics

about 11 hours ago
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Mikaela Shiffrin storms to stunning slalom gold to make Winter Olympic history

about 12 hours ago
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Hull KR’s rollercoaster ride from the depths to chance of World Club Challenge glory

about 12 hours ago
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The Spin | Lancashire’s new second home brings renewed hope and old grumbles

about 14 hours ago