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Joyce ‘shocked’ to receive Wales call-up for Women’s Six Nations only months after giving birth

about 6 hours ago
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Alisha Joyce returned to the rugby pitch in March just 123 days after giving birth and a week later was named in Wales’s squad for the Women’s Six Nations.The 28‑year‑old says she was “shocked” to get the call-up after welcoming her son, Ralphie, in November but adds it’s “cool” to be a role model for the next generation of players.Joyce was the first Wales player to use the governing body’s new performance maternity programme.The back-row, who shares Ralphie with her wife and teammate Jasmine Joyce, has played only 30 minutes of rugby since returning last month in a game for Brython Thunder where she came off the bench.The call from the Wales head coach, Sean Lynn, was not something she was expecting.

“I was shocked, to be honest,” Joyce says.“I think I can offer a lot to the squad especially in terms of experience.We have nine new caps.“It’s a slightly different role for me, being one of the older members of the squad now, which is crazy.Hopefully [I can] set an example of what being in a professional environment is like having been here for so long now.

”Joyce is back with Wales after missing the Six Nations and the World Cup last year because of her pregnancy.Now in camp Joyce’s son is there with her, essential to her being in the squad, and she says the first four-and-a-half months of being a parent have been special for her and Jasmine.“It’s incredible,” Joyce says.“Nothing can prepare you for it really.When he first came it was all the emotions of having a baby initially and then reality set in pretty quick.

We have got into the flow of things a bit more now and I suppose we have learned how to be parents quite quickly.We love every single second of it and we definitely wouldn’t change it for the world.I feel very lucky that I get to be a mum.”Sleep deprivation has been a challenge given the importance of recovery in elite sport.“It’s been the hardest thing to navigate,” she says.

“Ever since Ralphie came into the world we have split [responsibilities] half and half.At the moment he is sleeping like a dream.The first three months were really hard, now we have him in a good routine.“The first three months were a shock to the system.He was up every half an hour.

I can’t function like that and go back to rugby, that was not possible.But now he is going down, it makes a huge difference.We can actually function, we aren’t just surviving now.”Joyce played alongside Abbie Ward, who was the first England player to have a baby while being a professional, at Bristol added to her decision to have a child.“Being around Abbie I think definitely showed me that I haven’t [got to give up my career].

Before I would have been like: ‘I am not ready to put my career on hold,’“The older you get, the motherly instincts start to kick in and you’re thinking: ‘I know I am ready for a baby but what do I do? Do I do it now, do I wait? Do I miss the World Cup or the potential Lions selection? When is the right time?’“We went through IVF so it’s not a mistake, you have to plan and prepare and it is all very meticulous,That has probably been one of the best decisions we have made is just to go for it,Being back in the game now with Ralphie here is crazy, I cannot believe it has happened, to be honest with you,“We have got so many young girls now, how cool is it that they get to see that as well? You can be a mum.

Hopefully I can get back to the top of my game and show them that as well.”Joyce is targeting some game time in the upcoming tournament, with Wales kicking off their campaign against Scotland on 11 April, but she also has her sights set on the inaugural women’s British & Irish Lions tour in 2027.“I wouldn’t even say it was a dream because at the time there wasn’t a women’s Lions team.It would be so cool,” she says.“Trying to get back to the top of my game and if it comes, it comes.

It’s an incentive, anyone who said they didn’t want to do it would be lying,”
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UK food inflation ‘could hit 9%’, trade body warns as Reeves meets retail chiefs

Food inflation could hit 9% in the UK this year even if the strait of Hormuz opens within the next few weeks, figures suggest, as the Iran war pushes up energy prices.The Food and Drink Federation (FDF), which represents 12,000 food and drink manufacturers, has predicted prices will rise by “at least” 9% by the end of 2026, almost tripling a forecast of 3.2% that was made before the Middle East conflict.The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, met supermarket bosses on Wednesday to discuss how to ease any impact of cost inflation on prices at the till, while global markets rallied on remarks from Donald Trump suggesting the war could end in “two to three weeks”.The FTSE 100 shut 1

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Starmer’s ‘five-point plan’ was not a plan | Nils Pratley

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Claude’s code: Anthropic leaks source code for AI software engineering tool

Anthropic accidentally released part of the internal source code for its AI-powered coding assistant, Claude Code, due to “human error”, the company said on Tuesday.An internal-use file mistakenly included in a software update pointed to an archive containing nearly 2,000 files and 500,000 lines of code, which were quickly copied to developer platform GitHub. A post on X sharing a link to the leaked code had more than 29m views early on Wednesday, and a rewritten version of the source code quickly became GitHub’s fastest-ever downloaded repository. Anthropic issued copyright takedown requests to try to contain the code’s spread. Within the code, users spotted blueprints for a Tamagotchi-esque coding assistant and an always-on AI agent, per the Verge

about 2 hours ago
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SpaceX confidentially files to go public at $1.75tn, reports say

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Jaden Ivey’s release isn’t a victory for inclusion. It’s a lesson in athlete expendability | RK Russell

When the Chicago Bulls waived Jaden Ivey on Monday, after he made a series of unprompted anti-LGBTQ and religiously charged comments on social media, the move was framed as a response to “conduct detrimental to the team.” On the surface, the situation appears straightforward: a player said something controversial, and the organization acted.But there’s a version of this story where Ivey is still in the league. Where he and his publicist create a swift and thoughtful apology, where his overnight inclusion education uses all the key buzzwords to prove his newfound allyship, maybe he pays a fine or makes a small donation, and he’s able to go back on to the court and live out his dreams in the NBA, a league which has been pro-LGBTQ+ for more than a decade. Ivey’s words exposed his beliefs

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‘He’s phenomenal’: American teen fast becoming athletics’ next big thing

Fire on the boards. Slack jaws off it. Last week, I was fortunate enough to be yards away from the 17-year-old American high school student Cooper Lutkenhaus when he powered away from a strong 800m field in Torun to become the youngest world champion in track and field history. But no sooner had the applause died down than the search for superlatives began.“He’s like David Rudisha,” said Eliott Crestan, the Belgian who took world indoor championship silver behind Lutkenhaus

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King’s state visit to US will take place in April despite calls to delay amid Iran war – UK politics live

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Karl Turner has Labour whip suspended after criticism of Starmer and No 10

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Opaque party funding affects all of British politics | Letters

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Nigel Farage to snub US conservative conference brought to UK by Liz Truss

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Kemi the attention seeker somehow always makes two plus two equal five | John Crace

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