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Hendy hat-trick helps Northampton to Champions Cup stroll against Bulls

about 4 hours ago
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On the face of it Northampton are flying in the Champions Cup courtesy of two consecutive bonus points wins.The more pedantic-minded might also point out that both their opponents have fielded below-strength sides, but when the qualifying sums are completed next month that will not be the top line as far as the Saints’ management are concerned.Because regardless of the depth of the resistance they are facing, Northampton are again underlining their ability to pick apart sides who give them too much space and time.On this occasion they rattled up eight tries, including a hat-trick for George Hendy, two for the fit-again Ollie Sleightholme and one for the roaming Henry Pollock, who showed a further glimpse or two of his rare talent.One searing diagonal burst by the 20-year-old England back-rower, stopped only by a tap tackle within sight of the line, was the most obvious retort to the pre-match lip-smacking in South Africa at the prospect of him venturing down a dark alley populated by hard-nosed Afrikaaners unimpressed by his growing ­international reputation.

Toulon came out on top over Bath in an entertaining nine-try contest and took a 45-34 victory at the Stade Mayol.The result means all six teams in Pool Two have a win and a loss to their name after their first two matches but Bath's bonus point means they top the table with six points, with the other sides on five.Finn Russell slotted two penalties either side of Brian Alainu'uese's try which gave Toulon a 7-6 lead.Mateo Garcia kicked three points for the hosts following a ruck infringement but Bath went ahead through Ted Hill with their first try of the game before Garcia knocked over his second penalty to make it 13-13.Toulon went eight points to the good when Juan Ignacio Brex finished off after Kyle Sinckler's powerful run, that was before Garcia kicked his third penalty of the game - but back came Bath again when Russell's delayed pass allowed Santi Carreras to cross the whitewash.

Sinckler's powerful run proved troublesome again in Toulon's next try as Gael Drean picked a line to race clear and re-establish the French side's eight point lead but Bath were not going away themselves, Arthur Green dotted down to bring the deficit back to one.Toulon got their try bonus point through Lewis Ludlam but Max Ojomoh's short pass let Louie Hennessey cut the gap to four points for Bath before another penalty and Teddy Baubigny's try finished things off in the French side's favour.In the other Pool 2 match, Edinburgh were brought back down to earth in the Champions Cup as they fell to a 33-0 defeat at Castres.The visitors claimed a stunning win over Toulon on their return to the competition last week but they were well beaten in France this time.Bristol ran riot with nine tries as they thrashed Pau 61-12 at Ashton Gate in Pool 4.

Eight different try scorers got in on the act as Bristol made it two wins from two and scored all 61 of their points – as Tom Jordan kicked eight successful conversions – within the opening hour to claim a dominant win.The England prop Ellis Genge powered over from close range open a destructive afternoon of scoring and Fitz Harding slipped the ball to Benjamin Grondona in a two-on-one situation to go under the posts for their second try.Things were threatening to get a bit ugly for the French visitors when Bristol ran in three more tries before the break courtesy of Kieran Marmion, Kalaveti Ravouvou and Gabriel Oghre’s score at the back of the maul on the stroke of half-time.There were no signs of letting up in the second period either, Benhard Janse van Rensburg crossed over four minutes into the half before Joe Batley made it 47-0.Pau got on the scoresheet through Fabien Brau-Boirie’s try under the posts but Aidan Boshoff and Grondona – who crossed over for his brace – extended the hosts’ score, while Brau-Boirie’s second try was nothing more than a consolation for the visitors.

PA MediaWith the increasing number of cameras trained on the modern game, that was never going to stray too far beyond the boundaries of decency and, not for the first time, Pollock had the last laugh on the scoreboard.As the Bulls’ head coach, Johan Ackermann, correctly observed beforehand: “He gets under the skin of the opposition with his overconfidence, but the reality is that he backs it up when he plays.”With Fin Smith, the player of the match, George Furbank – increasingly strongly linked with a summer move to Harlequins – Rory Hutchinson and Alex Mitchell also playing slick supporting roles, the result was another of those one-sided spectacles that are now a feature of this tournament’s early stages.This should have been a delicious prospect for any rugby neutral: last year’s Champions Cup finalists against a team containing multiple Springboks.Instead, as is becoming a wearily familiar story in the pool stages, the reality was slightly more humdrum.

It remained a stronger Bulls side than some of those sighted in these parts in past seasons but a full-bore, eyeballs-out selection it was not.The visitors were missing half a team of Bok representatives with Handré Pollard, Canan Moodie, Wilco Louw and Willie le Roux, among others, all spared the East Midlands in December.It was not a massive surprise, then, when Saints took the early initiative, slick handling and a nicely timed pass from Pollock sending Sleighthome over in the left corner.The England wing has endured an injury disrupted year but is finally back doing what comes naturally.In his own half, unfortunately, the 25-year-old was less sure-handed, dropping a costly ball in contact which was then hacked on for the pacy Stravino Jacobs to break away and score.

Saints were suitably relieved when they did finally enjoy some sustained territorial advantage and created a mismatch out wide for Hendy to exploit.At which point, under other circumstances, it would have been the signal for Ackermann’s army to circle the wagons and smash their way back into the contest through sheer physical will.The truth, sadly, is that the best South African players cannot play across both hemispheres all year round without some occasional respite.And until that fiendish circle is even vaguely squared, their participation in northern hemisphere club tournaments will continue to create as many problems as it solves, regardless of the format.The format of the competition also has to take its share of the blame.

Bulls have already lost to Bordeaux at home but a single bonus-point win at home to Bristol next month followed by a losing bonus point in Pau may conceivably be enough to squeeze them into the last 16,On that basis, why would middle-ranking sides necessarily bust a gut in the pool stages if they are not overly focus on securing home advantage in the knockout phase?In this instance, certainly, the last quarter was a procession after Alu Tshakweni had been sent to the sin-bin for a retaliatory 53rd-minute kick at Manny Iyogun,With a numerical advantage against flagging opposition the Saints duly made hay with the hard-running ­Sleightholme and Hendy, twice, benefiting from the efforts of those inside them,Rare is also the game in which Pollock does not play some part in the narrative but these were nothing like the raging Bulls this competition would ideally like,“We knew when we saw the Saints team that it was going to be tough because of the quality they possess,” said Ackermann, whose side lost at home to Bordeaux in the opening round.

“It was just disappointing that we collapsed in the second half.”His Saints counterpart, Phil ­Dowson, whose side head out to France to face the holders, Bordeaux, next month, also admitted the club were realistic about the difficulty of retaining experienced players like Furbank in addition to their rich crop of young English talent.“We’re trying to work hard to keep George … but we respect the decision the player makes,” said Dowson, who has previously lost both Lewis Ludlam and David Ribbans to French clubs for salary cap-related reasons.“Obviously it would be a bitter pill if George bloody Furbank drops a goal from halfway in a semi-final, for example.If that eventuality happens and he ends up at an English club we’ll obviously track his career and keep in touch but I don’t think we can be bitter about that.

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technologySee all
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Disney wants you to AI-generate yourself into your favorite Marvel movie

Users of OpenAI’s video generation app will soon be able to see their own faces alongside characters from Marvel, Pixar, Star Wars and Disney’s animated films, according to a joint announcement from the startup and Disney on Thursday. Perhaps you, Lightning McQueen and Iron Man are all dancing together in the Mos Eisley Cantina.Sora is an app made by OpenAI, the firm behind ChatGPT, which allows users to generate videos of up to 20 seconds through short text prompts. The startup previously attempted to steer Sora’s output away from unlicensed copyrighted material, though with little success, which prompted threats of lawsuits by rights holders.Disney announced that it would invest $1bn in OpenAI and, under a three-year deal perhaps worth even more than that large sum, that it would license about 200 of its iconic characters – from R2-D2 to Stitch – for users to play with in OpenAI’s video generation app

3 days ago
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Musk calls Doge only ‘somewhat successful’ and says he would not do it again

Elon Musk has said the aggressive federal job-cutting program he headed early in Donald Trump’s second term, known as the “department of government efficiency” (Doge), was only “a little bit successful” and he would not lead the project again.Musk said he wouldn’t want to repeat the exercise, talking on the podcast hosted by Katie Miller, a rightwing personality with a rising profile who was a Doge adviser and who is married to Stephen Miller, Donald Trump’s hardline anti-immigration deputy chief of staff.Asked whether Doge had achieved what he’d hoped, Musk said: “We were a little bit successful. We were somewhat successful.”Doge created chaos and distress in the government machine in Washington DC, and by May more than 200,000 federal workers had been laid off and roughly 75,000 had accepted buyouts as a result of purges by Musk’s external team of often-young zealots

4 days ago
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ICE is using smartwatches to track pregnant women, even during labor: ‘She was so afraid they would take her baby’

Pregnant immigrants in ICE monitoring programs are avoiding care, fearing detention during labor and deliveryIn early September, a woman, nine months pregnant, walked into the emergency obstetrics unit of a Colorado hospital. Though the labor and delivery staff caring for her expected her to have a smooth delivery, her case presented complications almost immediately.The woman, who was born in central Asia, checked into the hospital with a smartwatch on her wrist, said two hospital workers who cared for her during her labor, and whom the Guardian is not identifying to avoid exposing their hospital or patients to retaliation.The device was not an ordinary smartwatch made by Apple or Samsung, but a special type that US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had mandated the woman wear at all times, allowing the agency to track her. The device was beeping when she entered the hospital, indicating she needed to charge it, and she worried that if the battery died, ICE agents would think she was trying to disappear, the hospital workers recalled

4 days ago
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From ‘glacier aesthetic’ to ‘poetcore’: Pinterest predicts the visual trends of 2026 based on its search data

Next year, we’ll mostly be indulging in maximalist circus decor, working on our poetcore, hunting for the ethereal or eating cabbage in a bid for “individuality and self-preservation”, according to Pinterest.The organisation’s predictions for Australian trends in 2026 have landed, which – according to the platform used by interior decorators, fashion lovers and creatives of all stripes – includes 1980s, aliens, vampires and “forest magic”.Among the Pinterest 2026 trends report’s top 21 themes are “Afrohemian” decor (searches for the term are on the rise by baby boomers and Gen X); “glitchy glam” (asymmetric haircuts and mismatching nails); and “cool blue” (drinks, wedding dresses and makeup with a “glacier aesthetic”).Pinterest compared English-language search data from September 2024 to August 2025 with those of the year before and claims it has an 88% accuracy rate. More than 9 million Australians use Pinterest each month

5 days ago
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UK police forces lobbied to use biased facial recognition technology

Police forces successfully lobbied to use a facial recognition system known to be biased against women, young people, and members of ethnic minority groups, after complaining that another version produced fewer potential suspects.UK forces use the police national database (PND) to conduct retrospective facial recognition searches, whereby a “probe image” of a suspect is compared to a database of more than 19 million custody photos for potential matches.The Home Office admitted last week that the technology was biased, after a review by the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) found it misidentified Black and Asian people and women at significantly higher rates than white men, and said it “had acted on the findings”.Documents seen by the Guardian and Liberty Investigates reveal that the bias has been known about for more than a year – and that police forces argued to overturn an initial decision designed to address it.Police bosses were told the system was biased in September 2024, after a Home Office-commissioned review by the NPL found the system was more likely to suggest incorrect matches for probe images depicting women, Black people, and those aged 40 and under

5 days ago
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Trump clears way for Nvidia to sell powerful AI chips to China

Donald Trump has cleared the way for Nvidia to begin selling its powerful AI computer chips to China, marking a win for the chip maker and its CEO, Jensen Huang, who has spent months lobbying the White House to open up sales in the country.Before Monday’s announcement, the US had prohibited sales of Nvidia’s most advanced chips to China over national security concerns.Trump posted to Truth Social on Monday: “I have informed President Xi, of China, that the United States will allow NVIDIA to ship its H200 products to approved customers in China, and other Countries, under conditions that allow for continued strong National Security. President Xi responded positively!”Trump said the Department of Commerce was finalising the details and that he was planning to make the same offer to other chip companies, including Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and Intel. Nvidia’s H200 chips are the company’s second most powerful, and far more advanced than the H20, which was originally designed as a lower-powered model for the Chinese market that would not breach restrictions, but which the US banned anyway in April

5 days ago
societySee all
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DWP needs overhaul to restore trust after carer’s allowance scandal, adviser says

about 15 hours ago
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Police forces in England and Wales to get units that tackle violence against women

about 23 hours ago
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Psychedelic treatments show promise for OCD while cannabis doesn’t, review finds

1 day ago
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‘People will listen’: turning anger into community pride in North Shields

1 day ago
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‘Beyond belief’ that resident doctors could strike amid flu crisis, says Starmer

2 days ago
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Tell us: are you a young person from the UK who has recently moved abroad?

2 days ago