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Even greater heights await Australia’s Winter Olympians after success of Milano Cortina Games | Kieran Pender

about 5 hours ago
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More than half of the 50-odd Australians who featured in Italy this month were Olympic debutants, suggesting a bright future aheadAustralia’s golden 2026 Winter Olympics campaign ended on Sunday not with a medal, but with a thrilling view of the future.Following the nation’s most successful Winter Games of all time, the denouement suggested that this might just be the beginning.Sixteen-year-old Indra Brown’s fifth place in the freestyle skiing halfpipe on the final day of Milano Cortina was a fitting conclusion to a remarkable Games for team Australia.While Brown missed out on a medal, her performance – just 5.5 points off the podium – was historic all the same.

Brown’s performance was the best by an Australian athlete under the age of 18 at the Winter Olympics.She also landed a 1080 spin, three full rotations in the air; it was the first time Brown had achieved the manoeuvre in competition, and she was one of only two competitors to land the 1080 on Sunday.Barely 16, with only a few months of senior-level competition under her belt, the landing showed remarkable composure on this most difficult stage.Brown’s heroics, and an admirable performance from promising cross-country ski talent Rosie Fordham in the 50km event, concluded Australia’s campaign on Sunday.With three gold medals, two silver and one bronze, it was an astonishing Games for Australia.

Finishing 14th on the medal tally – ahead of rivals Great Britain, and just behind winter sport heavyweights Canada, Japan and China – was unforeseen even by the most optimistic fans heading into the Games.In addition to individual talent, Australia’s success in Italy can in part be attributed to smart investment.In the absence of high mountains and sustained snowfall, Australian sporting authorities have invested in alternatives.Take the Geoff Henke Winter Olympic Sports Training Centre in Brisbane, where aerial and mogul skiers practice into water.It is its only facility of its kind in the southern hemisphere, and had involvement in a majority of Australia’s medals.

Danielle Scott, who won silver in the women’s aerials, said she would have quit the sport without the facility, which opened in 2021.Peak body Snow Australia has also developed a world class dry slope airbag at their training centre in Jindabyne, allowing skiers and snowboarders to practice year-round.As the head of Snow Australia told the Nine newspapers last week, “we are most competitive in the sports that can be trained well off snow”.All but one of Australia’s medals at the Milano Cortina Games – Josie Baff’s gold in the snowboard cross – fit that description.Both facilities opened in the past five years, meaning their impact is only now being felt.

The overall performance in Italy suggests a bright future.For Brown, that future is already here; the teenager is competing in the FIS Park and Pipe Junior World Championships in Canada in the week ahead, and was forced to delay her flight after the halfpipe final was postponed for a day due to weather.She also has the small matter of high school to worry about – Brown told reporters last week that in between qualifying she had been doing her maths homework (linear equations, to be precise).It will also be back to the drawing board for Australia’s sports administrators following this unprecedented Winter Olympic campaign.The Games concluded with a plea from Australian chef de mission and former gold medal-winning aerial skier Alisa Camplin-Warner for improved funding.

“We’ve probably been, in winter sport, disproportionately funded,” the team boss said on Saturday.“Even though we’re very grateful for the ongoing funding we’ve had, I think there’s just a real opportunity to equalise that a little.We can get to the next level and there’ll just be more Australians that can chase that dream.”Winter sports received just under $40m in federal government high-performance funding over the past four-year Olympic cycle.Summer sports receive multiples of that; this year alone, swimming – Australia’s most successful summer Olympic discipline – will receive almost $20 million for able and para-swimmers.

There are also fears that the focus on the home Brisbane 2032 Olympics could diminish attention and support on the Winter team.In her plea for more funding, Camplin-Warner highlighted the “shoe-string budget” that many Australian Winter Games athletes operate on.It is notable that even Brown, recognised as one of the most exciting young freeskiers in the world, has been crowdfunding through the Australian Sports Foundation for support.With time, age and no doubt more support following this impressive debut campaign, Brown will soar to greater heights.One disappointment on Sunday for the young Australian was the judging approach; having rewarded technical prowess in qualifying, judges seemed to place more emphasis on amplitude (height) in the final.

Constrained by her age and physique, Brown reached a maximum of three metres – one of her rivals, Britain’s Zoe Atkin who won bronze, reached five metres.For the 16-year-old, that height will come with time.Australian fans will hope the same is true of the nation’s Winter Olympics achievements generally.More than half of the 50-odd Australian Olympians in Italy this month are debutants.For them, and for Australia, the prospect of greater heights in four years’ time awaits.

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‘She did kill. There’s no grey area there’: Labour MP Naz Shah on the day she and her mother were arrested for murder

The politician was 18 when she and her mum were hauled off to a police station for the killing of the man she’d considered an uncle. What happened next would shape her future. She talks Labour’s woes, making mistakes, and why it’s finally time to share her own traumatic storyRead an extract from Naz Shah’s memoirNaz Shah found it thrilling when she was arrested on suspicion of murder. “I’ll be honest with you, I had fun. It was the most excitement I’d ever had in my flipping life

1 day ago
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Labour minister faces calls to be sacked over false claims against journalists

Politicians from across the spectrum have said a minister should be sacked after a Guardian report that he had accused journalists of having links to Russian intelligence.Their comments came after an investigation showed that Josh Simons, who was running Labour Together at the time, had falsely concluded the journalists had obtained information about the thinktank from a Russian hack.The revelation has added to the pressure on Simons, a Cabinet Office minister, who is already the subject of a departmental ethics inquiry, and prompted calls from several politicians that he should be sacked or resign.Kevin Hollinrake, the chair of the Conservative party, said Simons should be suspended from office and an independent inquiry should be carried out, adding: “The Cabinet Office cannot be left to mark its own homework.”Hollinrake said the need to act was acute because Simons, in his role as a junior minister, had a “ministerial responsibility for inquiries and whistleblowing across government” at a time when questions were being raised about his conduct

1 day ago
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Donor suspended from Tories pays £50,000 for dinner with Kemi Badenoch

A Conservative donor who was suspended from the party after being accused of bullying and inappropriate language spent £50,000 last week to have dinner with Kemi Badenoch, the Guardian has learned.Rami Ranger was the successful bidder for the dinner at a Tory fundraising event and will attend the meal with a small group of friends, infuriating those in the party who believe he should not have been readmitted.Lord Ranger, who has given more than £1.5m to the Conservatives since 2009, was suspended in 2023 after complaints about remarks he had made to an independent journalist, and separately, about Pakistanis. He was readmitted in November 2024, but lost his CBE soon afterwards

2 days ago
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Does Nigel Farage have a problem with women?

When Nigel Farage told a journalist this week she should “write some silly story … and we won’t bother to read it”, it provoked an instant – and divided – reaction. For some it was a “masterclass” in dealing with mainstream media, but for others it was “rude, dismissive, misogynistic, arrogant”.Behind the scenes, Farage’s treatment of the Financial Times’s Anna Gross – which was met with mirth and applause among Reform diehards in the room – provoked disquiet and anger among lobby journalists across the political spectrum.As the Reform UK leader was leaving the event, a Guardian political reporter suggested he had been rude and had upset the journalist. “Good,” Farage responded

2 days ago
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Starmer 2.0: could a more authentic PM revive Labour’s appeal?

Two days after Keir Starmer had been disowned by the Scottish Labour leader last week, and as a row raged over another controversial peerage, the prime minister decided to pick a fight with a billionaire.It was a dark week for the prime minister, with the departure of his longtime chief of staff Morgan McSweeney, who had become a deeply divisive figure and who took the hit for the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US ambassador, despite his links to the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.But last Thursday morning had – for a change – been dominated by a different story. Top of the bulletins were comments from Jim Ratcliffe, the Monaco-based Manchester United owner, who said the UK had been “colonised by immigrants”, citing wildly inaccurate figures.The previous afternoon, when the comments were first broadcast, Starmer tweeted to proactively condemn them as “offensive and wrong”

2 days ago
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UK ‘working with US’ to analyse impact of supreme court’s ruling against tariffs

Britain and the EU said they were assessing the implications of the US supreme court ruling against Donald Trump’s global tariffs, while business groups reacted to the court’s announcement with caution.A spokesperson for Downing Street said: “The UK government is working with the US to understand how the overturning of Donald Trump’s tariffs by the supreme court will affect the UK but expects our privileged trading position with the US to continue.”The UK was the first to strike a tariff deal with the US, with 10% tariffs on all imports from Britain, compared with a blanket 15% rate for the EU.The EU said it was analysing the ruling while continuing its drive to work towards reducing the tariffs the US imposed on European exports.The EU agreed the 15% tariff rate with the US at Trump’s Scottish golf course last July but 50% tariffs are still imposed on steel

2 days ago
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Trump’s trade war risks undermining his hopes of hefty US interest rate cuts | Graeme Wearden

about 18 hours ago
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China overtakes US as Germany’s top trading partner

about 19 hours ago
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‘It’s survival of the fittest’: the UK kebab chain seeking an edge with robot slicers

3 days ago
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Nascent tech, real fear: how AI anxiety is upending career ambitions

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‘The Brits are coming again’: Team GB hail their greatest ever Winter Olympics

about 8 hours ago
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Winter Olympics 2026 come to a close at Verona Arena after Norway top medal table – as it happened

about 8 hours ago