Jon Rahm free for 2027 Ryder Cup after striking deal with DP World Tour

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Jon Rahm has revealed he has ended his dispute with the DP World Tour, which returns the Spaniard to contention for next year’s Ryder Cup at Adare Manor, but he played down the sense of golfers sharply exiting LIV,Rahm, who has been tipped to make a return to the PGA Tour, has cited tight contractual terms as a reason he and others are not completely in control of their own destiny,The abrupt exit of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) from LIV – the Saudis will remove finance at the end of this year – has left the tour scrambling for alternative investment,Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau are LIV’s biggest names, whom many assumed would already be glancing towards a playing future elsewhere,Rahm urged caution.

“As of right now, I have several years on my contract left,” Rahm said,“And I’m pretty sure they did a pretty good job when they drafted that,So I don’t see many ways out and as of right now, I’m not really thinking about it since we still have a season to play and majors to compete for,So it’s not something I want to think about just yet,”Rahm did admit PIF’s change of approach towards LIV, after more than $5bn (£3.

7bn) of commitment, left players in shock,“I would say, like everybody, surprised, obviously unexpected,” he added,“We did [previously] hear the news that there would be funding through for many years, so [it was] unexpected,“Then as the future of the league goes, I think that’s obviously a question for the business people,We want to be here.

It’s been a lot of fun.I want to keep competing.I want to keep sharing some time with them.But only time will tell.”Rahm had been engaged in a lengthy and high-profile standoff with the DP World Tour over fines relating to LIV participation.

He is once again eligible to play in that domain after settling overdue monies and committing to play in five, non-major DP World Tour events in 2026.“There was some concessions on both sides,” Rahm said.“I offered some, they extended an olive branch.Obviously we’ve reached an agreement.That will not be a stress any more.

” Including, that is, for the European captain, Luke Donald, who otherwise faced the prospect of defending the trophy in Ireland next September minus Rahm.Scott O’Neil, LIV’s chief executive, is the man faced with the invidious task of plugging the gaping hole about to be created by a Saudi departure.O’Neil explained he was still in the early phases of piecing together a plan aimed at attracting investors.Intriguingly, he refused to clarify whether PIF wants a form of monetary return.The fund remains the majority shareholder in LIV.

“In a situation like this, it would be too early to be speculating on what will happen with the value creation, what our new investor or investors will be looking for,” O’Neil said.“That will all come out in the wash, if you will, in the next few weeks as we go to market.So it’s a bit early for that.”O’Neil claimed to have received “a dozen inbound calls” in recent days from potential funders.He added: “It was a split between private equity, family office, and then your traditional high net worth; you probably know who they are, the guys who invest in sports and sports teams.

So that’s been really positive.”
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Ann Barrett obituary

In 1968, when Ann Barrett qualified in medicine, the fast-changing specialty of oncology was a magnet for young doctors as new drugs and technology were beginning to nudge up survival rates. In her distinguished 40-year oncology career, Barrett, who has died aged 83, played a key part in improving cancer outcomes, particularly for children, becoming a world authority on paediatric radiotherapy.As chair of radiation oncology first at the University of Glasgow and then at the University of East Anglia, she was highly influential in the profession with more than 150 published academic papers. She had a significant impact on student education and was a leading contributor to several textbooks that are still “go-to” classics, including Practical Radiotherapy Planning (1985, now in its fifth edition, 2023), and Cancer in Children: Clinical Management (1975, now in its seventh edition, as the Oxford Textbook of Cancer in Children, 2020).After training at St Bartholomew’s hospital in London and various junior doctor posts, in 1977 Barrett became a consultant at the Royal Marsden hospital, a world leader in cancer research; Barrett specialised in brain tumours in children and in irradiating the central nervous system (the brain and spine)

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Dame Shirley Porter obituary

There was a time in the late 1980s when Shirley Porter was the second most famous and powerful female politician in Britain: “the Iron Lady of the town halls”. Like her heroine, Margaret Thatcher, she was a grocer’s daughter, though the family business, Tesco, was somewhat bigger than the prime minister’s corner shop. Porter’s eventual fall from grace was devastating both for her personal reputation and for Thatcherism’s perceived way of doing things. She was, simply, the most corrupt politician of her time.Porter, who has died aged 95, was pursued by the district auditor from her power base at Westminster city council, where she was leader for eight years, 1983-91, and eventually found to have acted illegally in selling council houses with the aim of increasing Conservative votes, in what became known as the “homes for votes” scandal

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Slow Alzheimer’s diagnoses ‘mean UK patients missing out on experimental treatments’

People with Alzheimer’s disease are missing out on experimental treatments because they are not diagnosed early or accurately enough to be enrolled in clinical trials, a UK charity has said.Trials of Alzheimer’s drugs reached a record high this year, according to data published on Tuesday, but Alzheimer’s Research UK said too few UK patients were taking part because their diagnoses were delayed or were not specific enough.The warning suggests patients are being left behind as research gathers momentum and branches out to tackle the condition on multiple fronts, a strategy that scientists consider to be crucial for halting the disease.Dr Sheona Scales, the director of research at Alzheimer’s Research UK, said the recent surge in clinical trials was driving demand for participants, but without a large and diverse range of patients to match to trials the UK risked missing out. “People won’t have access to the next generation of Alzheimer’s treatments,” she said

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‘Group is a lifesaver’: strangers buy Wetherspoon’s meals for homeless people through app

Carl used to own pubs – several of them – and a string of hotels. Then two years ago, rising costs forced him into bankruptcy. Now he sleeps on the beach in summer, and in winter sits in an all-night McDonald’s nursing a single cup of coffee.Carl’s daughters are in a different part of the country with his ex-wife. To maintain the illusion that he lives a normal life, Carl is careful only to video-call them from the local Wetherspoon’s with a meal and a drink carefully positioned in shot

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Parliament must heed public opinion on assisted dying | Letters

The Nuffield Council on Bioethics is an independent research and policy centre that aims to put ethics at the centre of decision-making about bioscience and health so that we all benefit. We agree that public views should be central to the debate on assisted dying (Editorial, 29 April). This is why we commissioned England’s first citizens’ jury on assisted dying in 2024, which produced rich and independent evidence about what the English public think about assisted dying, and the ethical, social and practical considerations that underpin their views.Over eight weeks, 30 jurors – who were reflective of the demographic makeup of the English population – spent a total of 24 hours hearing evidence from experts, engaging with perspectives from all sides of the debate, and deliberating in groups.At the final vote, the jury concluded that the law should be changed to permit terminally ill adults, with capacity, to access an assisted death

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Man produces sperm from testicular tissue frozen as a child in breakthrough trial

In a groundbreaking fertility trial, a man whose testicular tissue was frozen before he underwent chemotherapy as a child to be re-transplanted 16 years later has been able to produce sperm.It is the first time a transplant of cryopreserved prepubertal testicular tissue has been demonstrated to restore sperm production in an adult patient. The 27-year-old man had the sample frozen when he was 10, before undergoing potent chemotherapy as part of treatment for sickle cell disease.“This is a huge finding,” said Prof Ellen Goossens, of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, who led the trial. “Many more people will have hope that they can have biological children