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Cheltenham jockeys in alleged racism row bid to bury hatchet but inquiry continues

about 16 hours ago
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Declan Queally and Nico de Boinville appeared to resolve their differences on Thursday after an angry and controversial exchange of words before the start of the first race on Wednesday,Queally lodged a complaint with the stewards that he had received verbal abuse from De Boinville, some of which was of a racial nature, when he lined up against the running rail shortly before the field was due to set off for the Grade One contest,The two riders shook hands in the weighing room at Cheltenham, however, and told ITV Racing afterwards that their issues have been resolved,“All sorted, it was the heat of the moment and all is forgiven,” Queally said,“Best of luck to Nico in the future.

”De Boinville said: “I appreciate Declan and wish him the best,” before adding thank to the former jockey, Davy Russell, for intervening to settle their dispute,While the two jockeys were insisting that matter was closed, however, the British Horseracing Authority will continue to collect evidence before deciding next week whether to take its inquiry any further,“The BHA are dealing with it, so we’ll go from there,” Queally said later,“It was heated down there, we’re sportspeople and as was said this morning, tempers can rise,But we’ll see what the BHA say.

“I was where Nico wanted to be and unfortunately what happened, happened.Everyone would like to put this stupid matter behind them.If I hadn’t been caught after the race [by ITV Racing’s interviewer, Matt Chapman] when blood was still up, there might have been nothing about it.“There was effing and blinding, there was a racial comment thrown, I’ve told the BHA but I’d prefer to enjoy my day.”The starting procedures were a problem again when the Mares’ Novice Hurdle, the Jack Richards Novice Handicap Chase and Pertemps Hurdle final all failed to get away first time, and the British Horseracing Authority said on Thursday morning that it will conduct “a full review” into the starts following the festival’s final day tomorrow.

“It has been a tremendous two days of racing so far at the Festival,” Brant Dunshea, the BHA’s chief executive, said, “but we share the frustrations of jockeys, trainers and punters regarding the starts.“We have full faith in our teams of starters, many of whom are former jockeys, and the data shows that away from the festival, our starting procedures work well.“However, there are clearly several factors unique to Cheltenham which make the starting of races extremely challenging, despite the measured changes made ahead of this year in collaboration with the jockeys and racecourse.We will therefore carry out this review ahead of the next Festival.”The state of the going for Thursday’s card, the first of two days on Cheltenham’s New course, was also in the spotlight after Willie Mullins’s decision to scratch Fact To File, the hot favourite for the Ryanair Chase, from the card’s feature event.

Mullins was strongly critical of the ground, which was officially described as good, good-to-soft in places, in a subsequent interview with Racing TV.“If the ground is going to be like this, we’re not going to bring them,” Mullins said.“We were promised watering, and I’m not sure the watering we were promised has been done.I’m a little bit annoyed about that.“I know the weather forecast hasn’t been kind but very few people complain about too much rain and a bit of watering.

But this isn’t good for the type of horses we’re bringing over here.I know it suits some horses but for the majority of the good, big, National Hunt horses, we’d like it a little softer.”In Fact To File’s absence, Nicky Henderson’s Jonbon set off as the 2-1 favourite for the Ryanair, but he could not match the finishing kick of last year’s runner-up, Heart Wood, as Henry de Bromhead’s chaser came home 10 lengths clear.Another difficult day for the punters had opened with the 40-1 success of White Noise in the Mares’ Novice Hurdle and there was another big upset in the Grade One Stayers’ Hurdle, as the 11-year-old Home By The Lee, at 33-1, stayed on strongly to beat Ballyburn by a length and a quarter.Kabral Du Mathan, at 4-1, appeared to be travelling much better than his rivals on the run to the final flight, but Dan Skelton’s six-year-old, who was stepping up to three miles for the first time, emptied completely on the run-in and finished only fourth.

The third day concluded with a win for Ask Brewster in the Fulke Walwyn/Kim Muir Handicap Chase for amateur riders,The winner is trained by Cath Williams, who took over the licence at her Welsh stable after Evan Williams, her husband, was found guilty of assaulting a dog walker on their land with a hockey stick last week,
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Sussex therapist who claimed he could heal trauma with sex jailed for 11 years

A therapist who claimed he could heal birth trauma through sexual touching and oral sex has been sentenced to 11 years in prison.Gerald Peck, who has live profiles promoting his work as a bodywork psychotherapist, was convicted of five sexual offences on 2 February, after being charged in October 2024.Handing down the sentence at Lewes cown court on Thursday, Judge Mooney said: “The young woman who came to see you believed you could help her at a particularly difficult time in her life. She had every reason to believe she could trust you.“All the information you provided to her led her to believe you were a qualified bioenergetics practitioner

about 21 hours ago
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Life with my autistic sons: ‘How do you explain all the worries, the sleepless nights?’

When James Hunt began posting about his boys online, it was a way to describe the emotions and experiences of their extraordinary lives. In sharing his family’s joy and struggles, he realised they weren’t aloneMy conversation with James Hunt begins the usual way: an exchange of hellos, followed by the most mundane of questions. “How are you?” I ask.Although he responds predictably – “I’m all right … I’m good” – we both know that underneath this answer lurks a whole world of experience, and the plain fact that some people’s everyday lives are lived in extraordinary circumstances.Six months ago, this fortysomething father was leading the kind of life that might have caused plenty of people to break into small emotional pieces

about 24 hours ago
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Proposed law change will protect abusive men who push women to suicide, campaigners warn

Men whose abusive behaviour drives women to take their own lives are more likely to get away with their crimes because of proposed law changes, justice campaigners say.Ministers want to make it harder for inquests to pass verdicts of unlawful killing, which have been crucial in getting justice for women who killed themselves after suffering abuse.In October last year, Georgia Barter was found to have been unlawfully killed after suffering a decade of domestic violence and abuse. In 2023, an inquest found that Kellie Sutton, whose death was classed originally as a suicide, was unlawfully killed after suffering domestic abuse.The unlawful killing verdicts followed campaigns by the families of the women

1 day ago
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Women receiving worse treatment for back and neck pain – UK study

Women are receiving worse treatment for back and neck pain because their experiences are not factored into “male by default” clinical guidelines in the UK, research has found.The NHS fails to acknowledge sex-specific considerations such as pain being more common among women in its model of care for non-surgical management of chronic neck and back pain, according to research from the University of Lancashire.Lower back pain affects more than 600 million people worldwide, the World Health Organization states. Back pain costs the NHS billions of pounds each year and chronic pain accounts for millions of GP appointments annually, while musculoskeletal disorders remain one of the leading causes of work absence in the UK.A major review of clinical guidance, published in the Physical Therapy Reviews journal, found that by consistently only referring to people, individuals or patients, clinical guidance in the UK ignores the role women’s different skeleton size, hormones, experience of pregnancy or menopause can play in musculoskeletal pain

1 day ago
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For many of us, the Covid pandemic still isn’t over | Brief letters

I was surprised to see that your article (The Covid-19 inquiry is sounding a clear warning. If it’s not heeded, yet more lives will be lost, 5 March) speaks of those who suffered during the pandemic in the past tense, and does not mention the hundreds of thousands, like myself, who still suffer from long Covid. It is a devastating condition that is too often forgotten when the pandemic is discussed. Meanwhile, long Covid clinics are underfunded and many have closed. To many, the pandemic must feel like a nightmare that is thankfully in the past

1 day ago
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UK companies struggling to hire young people amid cost pressures, MPs told

British companies are struggling to afford to hire young people after a long period of rising costs that have hit profit margins and derailed recruitment plans, business leaders say.Rising labour costs including increases to the minimum wage and employer’s national insurance by the government have put young people at the back of the queue when employers consider recruitment, business lobby groups told MPs.They added that the Employment Rights Act threatened to make the situation worse if it discouraged employers “from taking the risk” of hiring young people with fewer skills, or without a long track record in the workplace.The British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) expects the unemployment rate to rise to 5.5% this year and said young people would be “disproportionately affected”

2 days ago
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Keeping it simple was always the answer for John Lewis | Nils Pratley

about 15 hours ago
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Watchdog puts UK fuel retailers ‘on notice’ over profiteering from Iran war

about 16 hours ago
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Google’s former Europe boss close to becoming next head of BBC, sources say

about 15 hours ago
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Lincolnshire council approves AI datacentre despite emissions warnings

about 17 hours ago
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‘There’s no crack’: Itoje says spat with ‘good guy’ Fin Smith shows England’s harmony

about 14 hours ago
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Pakistan’s Abrar Ahmed defies talk of ‘shadow ban’ with Sunrisers deal in Hundred

about 15 hours ago