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Leicester hit Northampton for six as league leaders crumble in fiery derby

about 5 hours ago
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You can play all the classy rugby you want, you can be leading the table with a few matches to play, but certain elemental truths still apply.One of them is that if you find yourself overpowered up front away from home in a sold-out East Midlands derby, you will be blown away.Northampton could have secured themselves a place in the playoffs here if they had won with a bonus point, but – how to put this – they did not.In a ferocious atmosphere, records tumbled as Leicester claimed that bonus-point win to move third, within one point of Bath, who play Exeter on Sunday, and five shy of Saints.They scored more points than they ever have in this fixture; there were more cards than there have ever been in this fixture.

Maybe not more aggro than ever, but there was plenty of that too,At the death, Izaia Perese was shown a 20-minute red for his upright challenge on George Furbank, but that was the least of the card dramas,Two yellows were shown after the second mass brawl, after Leicester’s fifth try, another for a swinging arm (Charlie Clare’s) with 12 minutes remaining, and two more for technical infringements,Leicester lost their fly-half, Billy Searle, in the week, out for the rest of the season, but they were bolstered by the return of George Martin up front,It looked from some way out like a contest between Leicester’s pack and Northampton’s backs.

Indeed, if the latter had been paired up with the former against the inverse, who knows how hideous the scoreline would have been.In the end, an avalanche of 22 Leicester points in the 10 minutes either side of half-time put the contest to bed.Northampton still hold their destiny in their own hands.No doubt that playoff place will be secured, but time will tell how much of a psychological blow this first defeat of 2026 proves.Saracens survived two late yellow cards to keep alive their hopes of a playoff spot after a 41-26 win at Bristol.

Their bonus-point win saw them reduce the gap to Exeter and Bristol, who both remain just ahead of the London club,Bristol were the their own worst enemies in the first half conceding 34 points from slipshod tackling and the deficit proved too great to overcome,Saracens’ tries came from Tom Willis, Hugh Tizard, Rotimi Segun, Ben Earl, Tobias Elliott and Fergus Burke, who added a penalty and three conversions,Owen Farrell kicked a conversion,Fitz Harding, Harry Thacker, Matías Moroni and Kalaveti Ravouvou scored Bristol’s tries with Tom Jordan converting three.

It took less than three minutes for Bristol to take the lead when captain Harding dived over after two strong bursts from Benhard Janse van Rensburg had put the defence on the back foot.Jordan converted from in front of the posts before Saracens responded with a simple penalty from Burke before Willis illustrated his power by forcing his way over from close range.Two minutes later Saracens stunned their opponents by adding another.A well-timed pass from Maro Itoje sent Tizard through a huge gap and after a few phases, the ball was recycled for an on-hand Tizard to complete the move.The fourth try of the half soon arrived when Bristol turned down a kickable penalty in favour of more attacking options and it paid dividends when Thacker burst away from a driving maul to touchdown.

That score was almost immediately nullified when Burke strolled through a sleeping defence to provide Segun with an easy run-in,Bristol’s defence was all at sea at it came as no surprise when Olly Hartley easily beat two defenders for two former Bears in Max Malins and Earl to combine to pick up their bonus-point after only 29 minutes,The home side needed a boost and got one with a try from Moroni but a superb off-load from Jamie George created a try for Burke for Saracens to lead 34-21 at the interval,Bristol missed 26 tackles in the first half and they soon suffered a further blow when Gabriel Ibitoye limped off three minutes after the restart,After the try-fest of the first half, remarkably the third quarter finished scoreless.

After 62 minutes, Saracens’ Theo McFarland was sent to the sin for collapsing a maul but Bristol lacked the invention to break down stubborn opponents,However on McFarland’s return an excellent cross-field kick from Van Rensburg was collected by Ravouvou for Bristol’s bonus-point, with Itoje off for an earlier collapsed maul,A thrilling finish looked on the cards but a try from Ravouvou was ruled out for an earlier knock-on before the Fijian was shown yellow for a high tackle on Noah Calouri as Saracens sealed victory when Elliott (pictured celebrating) intercepted a telegraphed pass,PA Media“To get a thumping like that is heartbreakingly disappointing,” said Phil Dowson, their director of rugby,“But it’s how you respond.

”The physical blows have been well documented.They are without pretty much an entire front five and that situation was exacerbated further by the loss to injury of Alex Lockett just before kick-off.His prowess at the lineout was particularly missed – and didn’t Leicester capitalise.The Tigers ransacked Northampton’s lineout and won key penalties at scrum time.Martin had merely to canter the ball over the line for Leicester’s first after a period of great pressure in the early minutes.

Callum Chick saw the first of the yellows for what would have been Northampton’s fifth penalty in that stretch, had Leicester not finished the try.The thing about having deadly backs, though, the thing about being Northampton, is that you can strike in the blink of an eye.Tommy Freeman scored the first of his double on 20 minutes, finishing a glorious move from one lineout Saints managed to execute successfully.Still, the thing about having monstrous forwards, the thing about being Leicester, is that you can pound a team into submission.At the 17th time of entry into the 22 (versus just the one by Saints at that point), Leicester scored again.

Will Wand punched, Martin’s carry sucked in multiple defenders and a fine miss-pass by Freddie Steward put Ollie Hassell-Collins away for try number two down the left.Jamie Blamire sparked that avalanche of points with Leicester’s third, from an attacking lineout, and he would finish it with their fifth 10 minutes into the second half.Between those, James O’Connor slotted a penalty and Adam Radwan gathered Jack van Poortvliet’s chip for try number four, but the latest fracas broke out after Blamire’s second, from another lineout.Joe Heyes needlessly shoved Craig Wright, who did not much like that.Cue another brawl and yellows for Heyes and Wright, who followed Josh Kemeny, only just sent to the bin himself.

Leicester Steward; Radwan (Perese 66), Wand, Bailey, Hassell-Collins; O’Connor (Kata 52), Van Poortvliet (Whiteley 68); Smith (Van der Flier 57), Blamire (Clare 62), Heyes (Hurd 67), Chessum (capt), Martin (Henderson 57), Liebenberg, Reffell, Moro.Yellow card Heyes 50, Clare 68.Red card Perese 76.Tries Martin, Hassell-Collins, Blamire 2, Radwan, Steward.Cons O’Connor 3, Bailey.

Pen O’Connor.Northampton Furbank (co-capt); Freeman (Litchfield 71), Hutchinson, Dingwall (co-capt), Hendy; F Smith, Mitchell (McParland 53); Iyogun (West 57), R Smith (Wright ht), Green (Millar-Mills 57), Munga, Van der Merscht (Prowse 50), Kemeny, Graham (Pollock 52), Chick.Yellow card Chick 8, Kemeny 49, Wright 50.Tries Freeman 2, Hendy.Con F Smith.

Referee Matthew Carley,It was carnage,It was delicious,Rugby in the raw under the East Midlands sun,Steward finished for Leicester’s sixth, and that record, after Hassell-Collins’s run, before Northampton did their level best to nab a bonus point anyway in the last 10.

George Hendy took Henry Pollock’s pass for Saints’ second, before Tommy Freeman finished again, after Tom Litchfield’s run down the left, for his 52nd Prem try for Northampton, another record.But the ones that mattered mostly fell to the Tigers.“When we play our game we can challenge anyone,” said Geoff Parling, Leicester’s coach.“The challenge is do that week on week.”We may yet have a grandstand finish at the top of the table.

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City & Guilds London Institute trustees accused of stalling inquiry into £166m sale

The trustees of City & Guilds London Institute have been accused of attempting to dodge accountability for a “catastrophic failure of governance” by stalling on the launch of an independent inquiry into the £166m sale of the vocational charity’s training and accreditation business last October.Members of the 148-year-old body voted overwhelmingly last month for the trustee board to trigger what would be the third investigation into how the foundation sold its operations to the private operator PeopleCert in October.However, members complained that the process then seemed to have stalled.The poll followed the Charity Commission opening a statutory inquiry in January, which was mirrored a day later by PeopleCert commissioning its own internal investigation into the deal.Neil Bates, an elected member of the City & Guilds council, which appoints and advises the trustees, said: “Why would they not be accountable for decisions made if everything was above board? It is shocking there has been such a catastrophic failure of governance – and subsequently a failure of accountability

about 12 hours ago
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Worried Britons ‘prepping’ for major disruption with stash of tins and cash, survey shows

Millions of Britons are “prepping” for a potential “major disruptive event” by keeping a stash of cash at home, stockpiling tinned goods or ensuring they have a battery-powered torch close to hand, new data suggests.With war raging in the Middle East and Ukraine, extreme weather becoming more frequent, and warnings that the UK’s critical infrastructure is at risk from cyber-attacks and power outages, many people feel the world has become a more dangerous and chaotic place.While some are taking steps to make sure they are not left high and dry in the event of a bank IT failure, others are preparing for a possible natural disaster, or even a societal collapse. UK experts recently advised people to have an emergency store of food in their home in case something happens that causes shortages.Link, the UK’s ATM network, tracks how people are using, and thinking about, cash and, for the first time, its researchers have asked the public about what “contingency planning” they are doing to prepare for an event that would cause “major disruption to normal services”

about 16 hours ago
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Google developers significantly misstate carbon emissions of proposed UK datacentres

Developers working for Google have significantly misstated how much carbon two proposed AI datacentres will contribute to the UK’s total emissions in planning documents reviewed by the Guardian.The tech company wants to build two huge datacentres – one 52-hectare (130 acre) project in Thurrock and another at an airfield in North Weald, both in Essex. To do so, developers are required to submit planning documents calculating how much carbon these projects will emit as a proportion of the UK’s total carbon footprint.In both cases, they appear to have compared one year of the proposed datacentre’s emissions with the UK’s entire five-year carbon budget, understating the significance of their emissions by a factor of five, according to experts at the tech justice nonprofit Foxglove.Greystoke, a company planning to build another datacentre in north Lincolnshire, one of the largest in the UK, also appears to have misstated the emissions of its project in the same way

about 5 hours ago
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What I saw at the Musk-OpenAI trial: petty billionaires, protests and a stern judge

For the past couple of weeks, on the fourth floor of a courthouse on a quiet street in downtown Oakland, the world’s richest man and one of the world’s most valuable startups have been at war over the future of artificial intelligence.Being one of the reporters in the room has felt like watching an updated, opposite-coast version of Tom Wolfe’s The Bonfire of the Vanities – ambition, ego, greed and the spectrum of social class on full display. The supporting cast has included Elon Musk fanboys, a stern judge and a who’s-who of Silicon Valley’s most influential people.All courtroom battles are theatre, but this one has proved to be a unique spectacle, with the judge chastising the lawyers for leading the witness, raising meritless objections and even too much coughing. With Musk on the stand, he griped that an opposing attorney had asked a leading question, to which the judge told him to “tell the jury you’re not a lawyer”

about 5 hours ago
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Glamorgan’s Norton claims hat-trick on debut, Sibley on song for Surrey: county cricket – as it happened

That’s it from us, back tomorrow. Good night!DIVISION ONEChelmsford: Essex 273 v Hampshire 235 and 58-2Sophia Gardens: Glamorgan 229 v Somerset 354 and 32-6Trent Bridge: Nottinghamshire 415 v Surrey 211-4Hove: Sussex 386-8 v Leicestershire 328Edgbaston: Warwickshire 147 and 267-3 v Yorkshire 152DIVISION TWOThe County Ground: Derbyshire 604-7dec v Northamptonshire 98-4Bristol: Gloucestershire 325 v Kent 308-8Old Trafford: Lancashire 201 and 45-3 v Middlesex 169New Road: Worcestershire 308 v Durham 207-6After that flurry of excitement at Sophia Gardens, time for me to write up. BTL remains open, of course.No century for Dom Sibley today, caught behind off Liam Patterson-White for 77. Surrey 198 for four

about 2 hours ago
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Aryna Sabalenka shocked by Sorana Cirstea’s comeback win at Italian Open

Aryna Sabalenka, the world No 1, suffered her earliest defeat in more than a year as she was toppled in the third round of the Italian Open by the soaring Romanian veteran Sorana Cirstea, who brilliantly held her nerve to close out a 2-6, 6-3, 7-5 win.The defeat marks a second successive surprise loss for Sabalenka, who started the clay-court season in some of the best form of her career after consecutive victories at the WTA 1000 events at Indian Wells and Miami. Until her quarter-final defeat to Hailey Baptiste at the Madrid Open last week, where Baptiste spectacularly saved six match points, Sabalenka had started the year by winning 26 of her first 27 matches.This is also the first time Sabalenka has lost before the quarter-final stage at any tournament since February 2025 and she will head to the French Open having failed to reach the semi-final in any clay-court tournament this year. Sabalenka also has fresh injury concerns to address after struggling with a lower back injury in the final stages of the match

about 2 hours ago
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Swinney keen to work with fellow nationalist devolved leaders in UK

about 5 hours ago
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Starmer brings in Gordon Brown and Harriet Harman to ease pressure on him to resign

about 6 hours ago
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British leader Keir Starmer under pressure after heavy election losses

about 8 hours ago
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The SNP may have won again but Scottish politics has been upended

about 14 hours ago
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Most Labour members think Starmer cannot revive party fortunes, poll finds

about 16 hours ago
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John Swinney urges Starmer to show Scotland ‘greater respect’ after SNP victory

about 21 hours ago