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Impressive St Helens sink Leeds to relieve pressure on Paul Wellens

about 8 hours ago
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There are moments in any Super League season that can feel pivotal,Some are good, some are bad: some can even prove to be a false dawn and merely turn out to be indifferent,But if St Helens are to achieve anything this year, there is one moment here that will certainly rank as season-defining,Paul Wellens’ side, just as they have been for most of 2025, were nothing special in the opening half-hour against a Leeds team with genuine Grand Final aspirations once again,These two sides have 18 Super League titles between them but recently, there has been only one who has looked like claiming another.

Maybe that perception will not change over the summer,But if it does, you can pinpoint one particular moment in this win,Not a try, not a kick, but a sensational tackle from the Saints’ newest teenage sensation, Harry Robertson, that denied Ryan Hall an interception score which would have put Leeds in front here,Had that happened, it was not outlandish to suggest the Rhinos would have gone on to win and inflict more misery on Wellens and the Saints,But in truth, Robertson’s effort summed up the many positives about this St Helens display which was built on effort, grit and determination: qualities they have lacked too often this year.

Those traits proved to be enough to capitalise on an off-night from the Rhinos and reduce the gap between the two sides to just a solitary win.One tackle does not make a summer, as it were, but this is at least a start in convincing the doubting St Helens public that Wellens has the credentials to turn this team around.“I thought we were really tough, really gritty and we needed to be,” Wellens said.“To keep a team as potent to Leeds as four points is exceptional.Huge credit to the boys.

”Two penalties from Kyle Feldt and a well-worked Deon Cross try were enough to put the Saints 8-0 ahead at half-time, but the big moment came in between all of that.Tristan Sailor’s loose pass was scooped up by Hall and Leeds, who hadn’t really had a sniff to that point, looked certain to level the scores, with a kick to go ahead.The Hall of a few years ago perhaps would have finished with ease, but Robertson seared across the pitch and made an exceptional cover tackle to bundle Hall into touch.The reaction from the Saints players said it all about the mood they were in.From that moment on, you always felt they would do enough.

Riley Lumb’s try seven minutes after the break briefly halved the deficit for Leeds and gave them hope, but they were some way below the standards we have come to expect from the Rhinos this year.Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotionTheir first defeat in six did not sit well with their coach, Brad Arthur.“It’s a good kick up the backside,” he said.“Maybe we thought we were going better than we thought we were.That’s a reflection of our attitude.

” Lumb’s try proved nothing more than false hope in the end, as the Saints responded in style.A perfectly executed scrum play saw another exciting homegrown product, Owen Dagnall, cross for his second try in as many games.How Wellens, himself a junior product of this club and one of their great players, must have enjoyed a moment like that – as well as Robertson’s incredible try-saving heroics.Dagnall’s score made it 14-4 and in truth, an error-strewn Leeds never looked capable of overturning that deficit with 10 minutes remaining.In fact, it was the Saints who finished stronger, as Sailor crossed for a deserved try on the hooter.

We will only know in the weeks ahead what this result means for the Saints,That is now four wins in five for them,But they needed a scalp against a real contender to make people notice that all is not lost yet for one of Super League’s great clubs in 2025,
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Paris airshow in subdued mood after deadly Air India crash

Every second summer more than 100,000 aviation industry professionals gather in Paris for an airshow – a flying display crossed with a vast conference. The mood at the latest gathering this week was more subdued than usual, after the deadly crash a week ago of a London-bound Air India flight in Ahmedabad.Investigators have recovered the black box from the plane to try to work out the cause of the disaster. The aircraft maker Boeing, and GE Aerospace, which made the 787 Dreamliner’s engines, both cancelled many of their media-facing events out of respect for the families of the 241 passengers and crew who died, as well as at least 30 more people on the ground who were killed.At an event that presents a mix of civil and military aircraft and weaponry, the war between Israel and Iran further overshadowed proceedings

about 23 hours ago
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UK consumer confidence up but fragile amid tariff and Middle East concerns

Confidence among UK consumers has improved but remains fragile in the face of expected petrol price rises amid escalating conflict in the Middle East, according to a leading index.The latest snapshot from the data company GfK says sentiment improved by two points in June but remained in negative territory at -18, well below the -12 of a year ago. A reading above zero indicates optimism; below indicates pessimism.The last time the headline index, which is closely watched by the government and the Bank of England, was positive was in January 2016, when it was at 4. It has had double-digit negative readings since September 2021 when Britain was in the grip of Covid-19

1 day ago
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UK manufacturing set for a funding boost to reduce energy costs

UK manufacturing is expected to receive support to ease energy costs and boost skills, the Guardian understands, as part of a long-awaited industrial strategy due to be unveiled next week.Energy-intensive industries have long complained that they pay too much for electricity compared with competitors in the EU, while the wider industrial sector has struggled to recruit skilled staff.As Nigel Farage’s Reform party targets support in Britain’s industrial heartlands, ministers are poised to pour funds into boosting the manufacturing workforce with proposals similar to a £600m package for the construction sector announced earlier this year, which underpins plans to build 1.5m homes.Ministers have drawn up plans to take aim at energy costs through two policies, one targeted at businesses that use the most electricity – such as steel and aluminium – and another designed to support manufacturing more broadly

1 day ago
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Thames Water renationalisation plans being stepped up, says minister

The environment secretary, Steve Reed, has said the government is stepping up preparations for temporary nationalisation of Thames Water, indicating it will reject pleas from the company’s creditors for leniency from fines and penalties.Thames Water’s largest creditors control the utility and have made a bid to cut some of its debts and provide £5.3bn in new funding to try to turn it around.However, the creditors have said their plan needs considerable leniency from the water regulators Ofwat and the Environment Agency over fines for environmental failings.The Guardian this month revealed that the creditors had asked for immunity from prosecution for serious environmental crimes in return for taking on the company

1 day ago
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Ministers set out plans to spend £725bn on UK infrastructure over 10 years

Ministers have pledged to spend £9bn a year on fixing crumbling schools, hospitals, courts and prisons over the next decade as part of the government’s infrastructure strategy.Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the Treasury, set out plans on Thursday to spend a minimum of £725bn over 10 years to boost UK-wide infrastructure and achieve a “national renewal”.Jones announced that £6bn a year would go to repairing hospitals in England, £3bn to fixing and upgrading schools and colleges in England and £600m to courts and prisons in England and Wales.The money will fund building improvements including removing crumbling reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac) in hospitals and strengthening safety and security in prisons.Jones told MPs: “Done properly it will result in tangible improvements to the fabric of our country, our local roads and high streets renewed so communities are even better places to live

1 day ago
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Bank of England warns of ‘elevated’ global uncertainty after leaving interest rates on hold – as it happened

Newsflash: The Bank of England has left UK interest rates on hold at 4.25%.The decision, which matches City expectations, comes as the Bank weighs up the risks to the UK economy from US trade wars and the conflict in the Middle East, which has pushed oil prices higher in the last week.But it’s a split decision – with six of the nine policymaker’s voting to hold, and three voting for a cut.Details and reaction to follow

1 day ago
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Garmin Forerunner 970 review: the new benchmark for running watches

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Israel-linked group hacks Iranian cryptocurrency exchange in $90m heist

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OpenAI boss accuses Meta of trying to poach staff with $100m sign-on bonuses

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‘It’s terrifying’: WhatsApp AI helper mistakenly shares user’s number

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Amazon boss tells staff AI means their jobs are at risk in coming years

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Up to 70% of streams of AI-generated music on Deezer are fraudulent, says report

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