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Redknapp‘s Gold Cup hopes faded but the impossible dream is on to save Spurs

about 9 hours ago
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Harry Redknapp is the living embodiment of Spurs’ motto, Audere est Facere: To Dare Is To Do.And on the day one improbable dream ended, with his horse The Jukebox Man fading to finish eighth in the Cheltenham Gold Cup, the 79-year-old switched his sights towards another bold adventure: saving Tottenham from relegation.“It’s a big challenge,” said Redknapp, who managed Spurs between 2008 and 2012.“Do I need the pressure at this stage of my life? Why not? I’d give it a go.I’m not too old.

I feel as fit as a fiddle,If they ask me, I think I’d do a good job,”That is one almighty if, of course,But Redknapp also insisted afterwards that the pressure of seeing his horse carry his colours in jump racing’s most prestigious race was greater than any he had experienced during his time at Spurs,“Managing Spurs wasn’t that stressful when I was there,” he said, with a twinkle in his eye and the broadest of smiles.

“We had a good team, so it wasn’t too bad.”Was Redknapp offering a classic come-and-get-me plea? Or was he merely playing to the gallery by telling Spurs fans what they wanted to hear? It wasn’t entirely clear.But the roar of affection he received when he was shown on the big screen beforehand showed again how popular he remains.Plenty of punters were prepared to show a deeper appreciation for Redknapp by backing his horse too.At the start of the autumn, The Jukebox Man was 40-1 for the Gold Cup, the same price as Spurs to win the Premier League.

At the off he was a lively 7-2 third favourite,It was shaping up to be a story for the ages,Especially as Redknapp has had racing and gambling in his blood for more than seven decades,Back in the 1950s, when betting shops were illegal, his grandmother, Maggie Brown, would take bets from housewives in the East End and pass them on to “Cyril the paperboy”, a trilby-topped bookies’ runner,Before the race, Redknapp recalled how he would come from school, aged eight or nine, and see Maggie being taken away in a police van to Poplar police station.

“Don’t worry about these bastards,” she would tell him.“I’ll be back in an hour.Your dinner’s in the oven.”Alas, Redknapp’s hope of adding the Gold Cup to his FA Cup triumph with Portsmouth and his title of King of the Jungle in I’m A Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here, was ended by Cheltenham’s steep hill.For a long way he allowed himself to dream as The Jukebox Man jumped beautifully and maintained close order in second place.

But when battle was joined with two fences remaining The Jukebox Man suddenly ran out of petrol as Gaelic Warrior took over and powered clear to win ahead of Jango Baie.Afterwards, Redknapp revealed there were excuses as The Jukebox Man had missed a week’s work in the buildup to the race – but he didn’t want to make them.His trainer, Ben Pauling, also disclosed that the horse “had made a noise” and Redknapp said his runner may need a breathing operation.“He travelled great until two out, and then he seemed to just fall in a bit of a hole,” explained Redknapp.“But overall he jumped a great run and he’s come back, hopefully safe and sound, which is the main thing.

“He missed a week’s work,” he added.“I’m not blaming it.I’m not making excuses.We didn’t say anything.But he simply just ran out of steam today.

I’m not saying he would have won.The winner was amazing.Different class.He absolutely bolted up, didn’t he?”Redknapp watched the race holding hands with his wife, Sandra, staring at the giant screen in the paddock.He was hoping for the best, but holding his breath at every fence.

For most of the race, there was no one else near the couple apart from a few photographers hoping to capture the glory moment,But when The Jukebox Man began to slip backwards they delivered a brutal verdict, discreetly moving away before the race was even done,With time, though, Redknapp will surely reflect that while his horse didn’t win, his presence here has given jump racing the sort of mainstream publicity that the sport rarely receives,For Redknapp wasn’t only on the front page of the Racing Post on Friday, he was also on Radio 4’s Today programme, waxing lyrical about how much of dream it was to have a horse with a genuine chance of winning a Gold Cup,While he was licking his wounds, Cheltenham was announcing that a sell-out crowd of 75,000 on Friday had brought the overall attendance across the four days to 226,223, up 8,130 from last year.

The festival also said that serious efforts would be made to bring racegoers back for more dreams and adventures next year.And Redknapp, as he made clear afterwards, will be prime among them.
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Hundreds of thousands of NHS staff in England attacked and harassed, survey shows

Hundreds of thousands of NHS staff have been attacked, harassed, bullied, or subject to racism, latest NHS figures show.The health service’s 2025 staff survey found that one in seven had experienced violence from patients or the public, while more than a quarter reported harassment, bullying and abuse, the highest levels in three years.Given that the NHS in England employs 1.5 million people, this would equate to about 217,000 experiencing violence and more than 380,000 reporting harassment and bullying in 2025 alone.Sexual harassment has also reached record levels, the figures show

about 21 hours ago
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‘Nowhere near enough’ being done to tackle misogyny among young boys

Not enough is being done to tackle misogyny among young boys and the toxic online influences on them, according to the National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for domestic abuse in response to data showing an estimated 18% of 16- to 19-year-old girls are victims of abuse.Louisa Rolfe said: “That’s a huge proportion of young people. And we work very hard in this space to look at where we apply justice outcomes, but we don’t want to criminalise a whole cohort of young people. We absolutely must identify the most harmful behaviour, but also our preference would be to prevent it.”She added: “This kind of offending needs a whole society response in terms of increasing understanding [of] the dynamics of abuse, particularly

1 day ago
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Threats against female MPs having ‘chilling effect’ on women in public life, minister says

Threats against female MPs are having a “chilling effect” on talented women thinking of going into public life but deciding not to, security minister Dan Jarvis has said.Warning that there was an “unprecedented” volume of threats against elected representatives – including assaults, vandalism, stalking and a “blizzard of online abuse” – Jarvis announced new security measures ahead of the local elections.“Women and ethnic minority representatives report the highest volumes of abuse, including overtly sexualised and racially charged threats, which has a chilling effect on who feels able to stand for public office,” he told MPs.The government announced the appointment of a deputy chief constable from Cambridgeshire police, Chris Balmer, as the National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for defending democracy.Other measures announced include the creation of a new threat assessment centre – modelled on an existing one for MPs – staffed by a specialist team based in counter-terrorism policing who will monitor and respond to threats against councillors and candidates in the upcoming local elections

1 day ago
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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

1 day 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

1 day 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

2 days ago
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Judge blocks justice department from subpoenaing Fed chair Jerome Powell

about 6 hours ago
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Oil price shock likely to ‘push the UK economy into recession’; US growth revised down – as it happened

about 10 hours ago
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Apple cuts China App Store commission fees after government pressure

about 10 hours ago
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Anthropic-Pentagon battle shows how big tech has reversed course on AI and war

about 16 hours ago
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Borthwick and Itoje fight for their futures as England seek redemption in Paris

about 7 hours ago
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Keegan Bradley ‘still heartbroken’ by Ryder Cup loss but open to returning as USA captain

about 7 hours ago