Sale warn England ‘superhuman’ Tom Curry needs time off to prolong career

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Alex Sanderson has warned that Tom Curry’s physical playing style will shorten his career and has suggested England should give him the summer off with the World Cup next year in mind,The back-rower sustained a calf injury in the warmup for England’s Six Nations defeat by Italy in Rome,Sanderson, the Sale director of rugby, said on Tuesday that Curry has a grade-three calf tear and “he’ll be back this season” – but when remains unclear,“With Tom being superhuman the usual layoff times tend to be diminished because of his character and physique,” Sanderson said,The 27-year-old Curry had surgery on a persistent wrist injury after the British & Irish Lions tour last summer, sidelining him until November, and also has a chronic hip condition.

He was out for eight months from late in 2023 after hip surgery and has endured a litany of other injuries in recent seasons.Sanderson believes taking time off for injury rehabilitation may help Curry extend his career, but also admits the flanker’s all-action on-field approach will realistically shorten it, too.“The physicality he plays at is definitely going to shorten his playing career from 35 to 32, something like that,” Sanderson said.“But the less games he plays the longer his career.He’s not going to play over the next few weeks and we’ll see how it goes.

“There’s a question around a summer tour,Does he need that? Does he need it to be in the best place for the World Cup? Is it better that he just has a few months off over the summer? That’s for us to discuss with England,”In the inaugural Nations Championship, Steve Borthwick’s side will travel to South Africa to play the Springboks on 4 July, then meet Fiji in Liverpool on 11 July, before a second long-haul trip to face Argentina a week later,Post-Lions fatigue may have contributed to England’s dismal Six Nations performance and Sanderson is keen to manage Curry’s workload,“We’ll sit down and look at a two-year plan,” Sanderson said.

“The way he plays and the way he’s managed will have an effect on his career, 100%,We are on top of it and I don’t think I’d want to change the way he plays,”Sanderson said that Sale are “hoping for Europe” for Curry’s return, which may mean the Champions Cup quarter-finals in mid-April or the final stages in May – if the Sharks can get past Harlequins in the round of 16 on 4 April,“Let’s see how it goes with regards to that competition,” Sanderson said,“We’ve still got to get there, but that’s the average time [three months recovery for the calf tear] it takes for a human being that isn’t as physically fit, who doesn’t have all the 24-hour, round-the-clock physio treatment, the oxygen tents.

“All of that speeds the process up, as well as Tom’s commitment to getting fit again.Europe would be the best thing that could ever happen to us, but with these things there’s the best solution, or timeframe, which I’ve given to you, or the worst which is what you’re talking about.I’ve not heard it’s three months at all – he’ll be back this season.”Meanwhile the Saracens director of rugby, Mark McCall, said Maro Itoje and Jamie George will be rested for the Prem encounter against Bath on Friday.“We’ll definitely rest Maro and Jamie George immediately,” he said.

“It’s been a very busy six or seven weeks for them both physically and emotionally.I think the right thing for those two players is to get a rest right away.”
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‘It’s like Covid II’: Canterbury’s student hangouts left empty by meningitis scare

At The Cricketers pub in the centre of Canterbury, staff had been geared up for lively St Patrick’s Day celebrations. The pub’s “Paddy shots” were on offer: two for £7. Irish music played in the background. But, on Tuesday lunchtime, there were few revellers.“Normally, as soon as the doors open on St Patrick’s Day, we’re full,” said the manager, Ash Bolonghe, casting his arm around the near-empty pub, with only a handful of matinee theatre-goers sitting by the window for a pre-performance snack

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Meningitis B: what are the symptoms, how is it spread and is there a vaccine?

Health officials have confirmed that meningitis B is the strain identified in some of the cases in Kent, in an outbreak that has killed two young people and left 15 others seriously ill.Meningitis is an infection of the protective lining of the brain and spinal cord. It is caused by different bacteria and viruses. Meningitis B, known as MenB, is the most common form of invasive meningococcal disease. It is caused by the Neisseria meningitidis bacteria, also known as the meningococcus

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Sally Berry obituary

My friend and former colleague, Sally Berry, was a psychotherapist who spent many years engaged in two pioneering projects in London – at the Arbours Association, where she lived and worked with people with emotional difficulties, and at the Women’s Therapy Centre, where she provided counselling to women experiencing struggles in their personal lives.Sally, who has died aged 85, began living and working at the Arbours Association in one of their homes in Crouch End, north London, in 1971, and eventually headed up one of the Arbours houses elsewhere in London while also serving as chair of its training committee, which oversaw the mentoring of therapists and residents alike.In 1976 she also joined the Women’s Therapy Centre, where I was a co-founder with Luise Eichenbaum, as a one-day-a-week psychotherapist, juggling that role with her continued presence at the Arbours community and becoming the centre’s part-time clinical director in the late 1980s. The Women’s Therapy Centre closed in 2005 and she retired from the Arbours Association in 2018, after which she ran her own small private practice until 2021.Born in Oklahoma City in the US, Sally was the daughter of Alma (nee Payne) and Max Berry, a broker for a grocery store

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Kent meningitis outbreak: a timeline of the health authorities’ response

Two young people have died in an outbreak of meningitis in Kent as private supplies of vaccines run out. Here’s what we know about how the disease spread and what the authorities did to tackle it.All the cases of the meningitis outbreak are linked to those who attended the Club Chemistry nightclub in Canterbury, Kent, on 5, 6 or 7 March. The club has since closed voluntarily. Anyone who attended the club on these dates or who believes they were in close contact with someone who was, has been urged to take up the offer of antibiotics

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I help people with psychosis off the streets. Sometimes, their minds won’t let them leave

The apartment came up on the city’s alert system: a studio on a leafy street, one block from Prospect Park in Brooklyn.The location is extremely desirable – it would be a score for any single person hunting for their first New York rental, let alone someone who had spent years in the shelter system.But Diane, my client, rejects it outright.“As I’ve told you,” she says, “the prophecy apartment is on 40th and Amsterdam.”I remind her again that the intersection of 40th Street and Amsterdam Avenue does not exist in New York City

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Tell us: how is the meningitis outbreak in Canterbury being handled?

A meningitis outbreak in Kent has been linked to a strain that most young people are not routinely vaccinated against, with two people confirmed to have died and 11 more in hospital. Health officials have offered antibiotics to those at risk, as authorities work to contain the spread.We want to hear from people living in Canterbury and the surrounding area whether the outbreak is being well managed by the authorities.How is it affecting you and your community? How has the response from the university, schools and health authorities been handled? How are people around you feeling, and what support is available? Have you or someone you know been affected?You can share your responses with us in the form below or by messaging us. We will contact you first before we use your submission