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Early crash disrupts US favorite Jessie Diggins in race for skiathlon gold

about 3 hours ago
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Jessie Diggins’s farewell Olympics began with a crash and a scramble on Saturday, the trailblazing star of American cross-country skiing fighting back to finish eighth in the women’s skiathlon as Sweden delivered a commanding one-two in the first cross-country skiing race of the Milano Cortina Games.Frida Karlsson powered to gold ahead of teammate Ebba Andersson, with Norway’s Heidi Weng taking bronze, as the first Olympic women’s skiathlon contested over the new 20km distance quickly turned into a test of endurance, conditions and survival.For Diggins, the world’s No 1-ranked cross-country skier and widely viewed as one of the pre-race favorites, the race unraveled early.During the opening lap of the classical section, Finland’s Vilma Nissinen fell on a downhill turn, triggering congestion in the pack.In the chaos, Diggins tumbled with Norway’s Karoline Simpson-Larsen and was forced into heavy traffic as the race began to stretch apart.

“My tip just disappeared in the slush and unfortunately it was a tough spot where you lose all your momentum,” Diggins said,“A lot of things out of my control just didn’t work out for me today, but that’s OK,I’m really proud of my heart and my grit and the amount of energy and commitment I put into this, not just today but every day,”At one stage Diggins was as low as 14th place and facing a long solo effort to reconnect with the leaders, particularly with the Swedish team driving a relentless pace from the front,By the halfway transition she was already chasing a race that was slipping away.

Karlsson and Andersson had raced tightly together through the classic portion in a lead group dominated by Scandinavian skiers, before breaking the race open early in the freestyle segment.Karlsson proved untouchable from there, clocking 53min 45sec and finishing 51 seconds clear of Andersson, with enough time to grab a Swedish flag before crossing the line alone.Andersson finished in 54:36 and Weng in 55:11 after a late push secured bronze.Karlsson said the scale of the moment only fully registered late in the race.“That was the moment when it hit me.

I was like, OK, this is for real,” she said,“I had so much fun out there today and I am really proud of my whole team who have made this happen,The skis were super and the body felt amazing,“In the home straight, I kind of understood that I would win,It feels so nice to do it this way, with the team.

”The race was contested on wet, energy-sapping snow under cloud cover on the Dolomite course at Tesero Cross-Country Stadium, with temperatures around 41F (5C), light winds and heavy humidity adding another layer of difficulty,Karlsson, 26, looked at ease in the conditions, executing a flawless ski exchange and steadily distancing the field,The victory marked her first individual Olympic medal after winning a relay bronze at the Beijing Games,“We’ve worked hard for many years and I’ve found my way forward together with my coach,” Karlsson said,“I’ve never been as much in love with skiing as I am now.

This is a once-in-a-lifetime moment.”Diggins produced a trademark fightback once the race shifted to freestyle, her strongest discipline.The Minnesota native clawed back positions over the second half of the race to finish eighth, 2min 21sec behind Karlsson and 55 seconds off the podium, still emerging as the top US finisher after what could easily have become a far more difficult result.“The crash wasn’t that big of a deal to me,” said Diggins, whose famous 2018 team sprint gold with Kikkan Randall marked the first Olympic title in US cross-country skiing history.“Yes, I did lose some time but that wasn’t the bigger problem today, so I just kept focusing on: ‘Stay calm, work your way back and ski the best you can ski.

’”Saturday’s race also marked a historic shift for the sport.For the first time in Olympic history, men and women contested equal 20km skiathlon distances, with athletes racing 10km in classic technique before switching equipment mid-race for 10km of freestyle.The event opened a cross-country program that will feature 12 medal races over the course of the Games.The result was a brutal introduction to Diggins’s final Olympic campaign after the 34-year-old announced she will retire at the end of the season, calling time on a 15-year career that has completely recalibrated expectations for American cross-country skiing.The most decorated US cross-country skier in history, Diggins arrived in Milan leading the World Cup standings and fresh off a dominant Tour de Ski, framing the Olympics as a chance to race with freedom and perspective.

Saturday did not unfold as planned.But her recovery to finish inside the top 10 – after losing contact with the leaders in the opening minutes – served as an early reminder of the resilience that has defined her career.“I’m in the best shape of my life and my body felt really good, but there’s a lot of things that need to come together for a good ski race to happen,” Diggins said.“There’s a lot of puzzle pieces that need to lock into place and I was really encouraged by the skate [freestyle] half, but the classic half, the things out of my control did not go very well.”Diggins, who is expected to compete in all six women’s events on the cross-country slate, will have further chances to add to her career haul of three Olympic medals before bringing her career to a close on home snow at the World Cup finals next month in Lake Placid.

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Most statin side-effects not caused by the drugs, study finds

Almost all side-effects listed for statins are not caused by the drugs, according to the world’s most comprehensive review of evidence.Other than the well-known risks around muscle pain and diabetes, only four of 66 other statin side-effects listed on labels – liver test changes, minor liver abnormalities, urine changes and tissue swelling – are supported by evidence. And the risks are very small, according to the systematic review and meta-analysis published in the Lancet.Statins have been used by hundreds of millions of people worldwide over the last three decades and are proven to reduce heart attacks, strokes and cardiovascular deaths. At the same time, millions have been put off the drugs amid long-running safety concerns, with statin labels listing dozens of possible side-effects

2 days ago
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Alton Towers to test excluding people with autism and ADHD from disability fast lane

People with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), anxiety and autism will be prevented from using fast-lane disability queueing passes at Alton Towers during a trial over the February half-term holidays.Merlin Entertainments, which runs the theme park in Staffordshire, provides a “ride access pass” to visitors who have difficulty queueing due to a disability or medical condition.The pass allows guests to book a slot on a virtual queueing system for themselves and up to three companions. They are then allowed to wait for their turn away from often crowded queues.But the company said disabled visitors with “additional accessibility needs” have said the digital pass “simply isn’t working for them, particularly as demand has grown and queue times for these guests have increased”

2 days ago
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We need new drugs for mental ill-health | Letter

It is not only veterans and emergency workers living with post-traumatic stress disorder who could benefit if ministers heed the call from Sir Nick Carter (Ex-British army chief calls on ministers to back MDMA-assisted therapy for veterans, 1 February). Thousands of people who have major mental illness, and those dealing with bereavement and trauma, could be helped too.The shocking lack of progress in developing transformative psychiatric medicines, and a dearth of innovation has left clinicians with few weapons in their armoury to relieve mental pain. Families and people scarred by long-term distress tell us they are desperate for new treatments and therapies.At the Prince of Wales International Centre for Sane Research, our research centre in Oxford, we host clinical trials researching the medical use of innovative interventions such as esketamine and cannabidiol for psychiatric ill-health

2 days ago
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Violence is part and parcel of how prisons function | Letter

Alex South’s article (Death on the inside: as a prison officer, I saw how the system perpetuates violence, 13 January) limits the scope of prison violence to individual acts by focusing on prisoner-on-prisoner homicides. But violence is part and parcel of how prisons function.Hundreds of people die in prison each year, the majority by suicide, medical neglect or drugs. Even if we focus on homicides, they reveal how violence operates at an institutional level. Last year, the inquest of Sundeep Ghuman exposed how it was multiple failures by the prison, not just the actions of his cellmate, that led to his unlawful killing

2 days ago
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Blanket rule on trans women in men’s prisons would deny their identity, says Scottish government

A blanket rule to house transgender women in men’s prisons, even when they pose no risk to others, would be a “fundamental denial” of their identity, the Scottish government has argued.Placing a trans inmate in a prison that does not align with their lived gender runs counter to the aims of rehabilitation, Gerry Moynihan KC said on Thursday as he set out Scottish ministers’ position that a blanket rule on where prisoners are housed could contravene obligations under the European convention on human rights.In its latest court battle with the SNP government, For Women Scotland is challenging guidance that says trans prisoners should be housed according to individual risk assessment, which the group argues is contrary to the supreme court’s ruling on women-only spaces.For Women Scotland brought the original challenge that resulted in last April’s landmark ruling that the definition of a woman in equalities law refers to biological sex.Arguing that the supreme court decision was “not a universal proposition” but only for the purposes of the Equality Act, Moynihan said: “Where a transgender prisoner does not pose an article 8 problem, does not threaten the rights of others – are we to have an absolute rule that says that they must be accommodated in a prison of their sex?“Why? The sole reason is that they are to be classified as a man

2 days ago
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Does getting cold increase your chances of catching flu?

“Put your coat on or you’ll catch your death of cold.” It’s a common refrain that feeds the narrative that getting cold will make us sick. And it’s true that illnesses are more common during the winter months, but is it true that you are more likely to catch the flu if you forget your hat?Not exactly. Writing in The Conversation, medical microbiologist Manal Mohammed from the University of Westminster has explained that colds and flu are caused by viruses that spread either by respiratory droplets or person to person regardless of the temperature. However, there is a bit of truth in the idea – many viruses survive for longer in colder and dryer conditions, increasing the chances of them hanging around and infecting a fresh victim

3 days ago
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Stellantis takes €22bn hit after ‘overestimating’ pace of shift to EVs

1 day ago
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Price of average UK home passes £300,000 for first time, Halifax says

1 day ago
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Tell us: how have you been affected by falling cryptocurrency prices?

1 day ago
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Hail our new robot overlords! Amazon warehouse tour offers glimpse of future

1 day ago
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England v Wales: Six Nations 2026 rugby union – live

about 2 hours ago
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Haiti Couleurs highlights Gold Cup credentials with Denman Chase victory

about 2 hours ago