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Castleford’s shock win over Wigan shows NRL that Super League still has a lot to offer

about 7 hours ago
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The talks have started and the jockeying for position in the boardrooms has begun,In the coming weeks, we will find just how strong an offer Australia’s National Rugby League is prepared to make to invest in Super League and potentially transform the fortunes of the competition,There is a school of thought, perhaps perpetuated more by those in Australia than in Europe, that Super League is flailing and in desperate need of help,In terms of the financials there may be some merit in that, with wealthy club owners losing tens of millions between them each year,As business models go, it is hardly sustainable.

But if NRL executives are looking at Super League and wondering what kind of competition they are investing in, they should be heartened by the fact that on the field, there really isn’t much tinkering required.From the opening eight rounds, few results have shown that more than this one.Any healthy competition thrives on unpredictability and uncertainty; the NRL has had it for years and there is a fair argument, with only four clubs winning the first 30 editions of Super League, that the game in the northern hemisphere does not.The gulf between the best and the rest has always felt big – until the past year or so that is.Super League has developed a sense that almost any game can provide any outcome, which is attractive for neutrals, broadcasters and, in the end, potential investors such as the NRL.

Had you said two years ago, when Wigan were dominating the sport, that they would lose back-to-back home games against the team at the bottom of the table, you would have been laughed at.But after collapsing at home to Huddersfield, the Warriors did it again, with Castleford the latest to come to the Brick Community Stadium and upset the odds.The Tigers have had their struggles in the early weeks of 2026 but this was perhaps an afternoon that could spark their season into life after a fairly morose opening under Ryan Carr.They were worthy winners here against an albeit injury-hit Warriors, who were the pacesetters after a month but due to the even-handed feel across Super League are now just another defeat away from falling out of the playoff places.Wigan have not lost three in a row in the league since the summer of 2021, incidentally.

“We got a reminder against Huddersfield that anything can happen but we don’t need it,” their beaten coach, Matt Peet, reflected.“You’re in a game every week and you have to be at your best every week.”There is a bluntness to his side without the imperious Bevan French, one of few stars in Super League who could walk into most teams on either side of the globe.But Castleford deserve immense credit.Having trailed 14-6 at half-time, they scored 18 unanswered points thanks to tries from Jack Ashworth, Krystian Mapapalangi and George Lawler.

Some critics have questioned where clubs such as Castleford may sit in the NRL’s vision if it wishes to streamline Super League.This result perhaps showed why they still have their place.The mood around the clubs to the visit from the NRL’s chief executive, Andrew Abdo, this week is largely positive.Abdo will likely return next month with a formal offer that will be put to the clubs, who have to relinquish their decision-making rights and allow the NRL to form an independent commission that would govern the sport.That is long overdue.

Clubs have run the sport in their own interests for too long but simultaneously, they do not have to roll over to all of the NRL’s demands.Crowds are up, TV figures are up and there is a title race which could arguably include as many as five or six teams.Sure, money is tight and the NRL’s overtures are not to be ignored; this could be a gamechanging moment for rugby league in Europe.But do not be fooled into thinking Super League has a weak standpoint in terms of negotiations.This competition has a lot to offer.

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Winners and judges out of pocket as £20,000 writing awards appear to have closed

A competition for new writers that promised a £20,000 prize fund appears to have shut down, leaving winners and judges, including a Booker prize-winning novelist, out of pocket.Established in 2022, the Plaza Prizes last year offered 10 awards that were judged by the “finest poets and writers in the world”.However, some of the judges for the 2025 competition say they were not paid, and a number of winners say they had their entries withdrawn after being accused of using AI to create their work – allegations they strenuously denied.One judge, the 2021 Booker prize winner Damon Galgut, described the competition as a “scam” after he did not get paid for his work judging a fiction section of the annual competition.Anthony Joseph, who won the 2022 TS Eliot poetry prize, also says he was not paid for his work

2 days ago
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Zelda taught me the importance of play – and has helped me deal with work, parenting and grief

I initially dismissed the Wind Waker’s cartoonish visuals as juvenile. But now I try to carry the game’s sense of joy into all aspects of my lifeI had a complicated relationship with video games when I was a teenager. I had straightforwardly, wholeheartedly loved the Nintendo games that I’d grown up with, tumbling around primary-coloured dreamscapes in Super Mario 64 and having the time of my life. But as I grew into a pretentious young adult in the early 00s, I started to want more from games, and I wasn’t finding it. So many of them were mindless, or juvenile, or needlessly violent

2 days ago
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From Lee Cronin’s The Mummy to Zayn: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Lee Cronin’s The MummyOut now You probably know what The Mummy is, but do you know what a Lee Cronin is? Allow us to assist: he’s the Irish director responsible for effective indie horror The Hole in the Ground and the highest grossing entry in the Evil Dead franchise, Evil Dead Rises. His version of this classic horror sees a journalist (Jack Reynor) and his wife (Laia Costa) reunited with their child who went missing in the desert eight years ago, with nightmarish consequences.The Wizard of the KremlinOut now Jude Law is, wait for it, Vladimir Putin, with Paul Dano as fictional spin doctor Vadim Baranov in a new thriller from Olivier Assayas (Personal Shopper). Based on the l’Académie française prize-winning debut novel from Giuliano da Empoli.Miroirs No 3Out now German director Christian Petzold returns with a new film (the title refers to the piano solo by Ravel) starring his regular collaborator Paula Beer as a classical piano student recuperating in rural idyll afrer a dramatic car crash

2 days ago
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Lost Federico García Lorca verse discovered 93 years after it was written

A previously unknown verse attributed to Federico García Lorca has been discovered 93 years after the celebrated Spanish poet and playwright is believed to have jotted it on the back of one of his manuscripts.Lorca is thought to have written the eight-line poem in 1933 while working on the collection Diván del Tamarit, a homage to the Arab poets of his native Granada.The newly discovered verse was found on the reverse of a manuscript of one of the Tamarit poems – Gacela de la raíz amarga – which the flamenco singer and Lorca enthusiast Miguel Poveda bought from a German antiquarian.It has since been verified by the Lorca expert Pepa Merlo and will feature in a forthcoming book.The brief verse, composed three years before Lorca was murdered in the early days of the Spanish civil war, reveals the poet’s familiar preoccupation with the passing of time: “The clock sings / I count the hours mechanically / Seven o’clock; twelve o’clock / It’s all the same / I am not here / It is the mark of flesh / That I left behind when I departed / So as to know my place / Upon my return

2 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Trump’s Vatican feud: ‘Damn, the pope just read you for filth’

On Thursday night, late-night hosts weighed in on Donald Trump’s tense back and forth with the pope over the war in Iran, high gas prices and outlandish details from a new biography of Robert F Kennedy Jr.On the Late Show, Stephen Colbert focused on Maga’s escalating feud with the pope. Reacting to comments by the House speaker, Mike Johnson, that Pope Leo XIV misunderstood the concept of the just war doctrine, Colbert said incredulously:“Correcting the pope on Catholic theology is a little like going into the woods and saying: ‘Excuse me Mr Bear, do you really think this is the appropriate place for you to be pooping? Who’s going to clean that up?”Colbert went on to explain that the “just war” is a concept of Catholic doctrine that goes back to the earliest days of the church. “It must be in self-defense once all peace efforts have failed,” said the host. “Only then can the war can be said to have ‘just cause’

3 days ago
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‘Packaging evil into something funny’: is making fun of Trump now just ‘clownwashing’?

During Donald Trump’s first term, as his lies distorted reality and gaslighted Americans, Stephen Colbert said his goal was to remind his audience: “Hey, you’re not crazy.”But watching political comedy during Trump’s second term – be it a deranged Saturday Night Live impression of a cabinet member, or a rapid-fire late-night monologue full of ICE jokes – it’s hard not to wonder: are we placating ourselves from the enormity of Trump-induced horror?It’s not a new concern, of course. Weak mockery of Nazi leaders may have allowed Germans to “let off steam” while the regime solidified its power. Decades later, as The Daily Show was taking off, some pundits feared it encouraged apathy by rolling its eyes at the political sphere. As the US inches closer to autocracy, how can comedy work against repression, rather than sanitizing its targets – call it “clownwashing”?“We are in a hyper-individualistic, transactional, consumerist kind of culture

3 days ago
businessSee all
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Ed Miliband to double down on net zero with measures to combat Iran energy shock

about 10 hours ago
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ABF poised to reveal result of Primark and food business demerger plan

about 15 hours ago
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We all share blame for the decline of our high streets | Brief letters

about 22 hours ago
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Independent bookstores make quiet comeback as big chains dominate retail

about 24 hours ago
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Bank bosses called to meeting with Reeves over impact of Iran war on UK economy

1 day ago
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Falling fertility, debt and AI: is the US headed toward a population crisis?

1 day ago