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France maintain Grand Slam dream with Italy win

Alastair Telfer

BBC Sport journalist

Men’s Six Nations

France (19) 33

Tries: Bielle-Biarrey, Meafou, Ramos, Drean, Gailleton Cons: Ramos 4

Italy (8) 8

France recorded a bonus-point win against a spirited Italy in Lille to maintain their bid for a Six Nations Grand Slam and back-to-back titles.

Les Bleus raced into a 19-0 lead through tries by Louis Bielle-Biarrey, Emmanuel Meafou and Thomas Ramos, who was a late switch at fly-half after Matthieu Jalibert was ruled out of the game.

Despite the early dominance on the scoreboard, Italy remained competitive and responded by an Ange Capuozzo try and a Paolo Garbisi penalty.

With Louis Lynagh in the sin-bin, debutant Gael Drean grabbed the vital bonus-point try and Emilien Gailleton crossed in a less eventful second half.

The visitors have only beaten France twice in the Six Nations, with the 2024 game ending in a thrilling draw in Lille.

France, who lost only one game in last year’s championship, next travel to Edinburgh to face Scotland on Saturday, 7 March, while Italy host England on the same day.

Given Galthie’s side’s strength at home, where they will play England in the final game, the next match could define their Grand Slam hopes.

Back-to-back heavy defeats for Steve Borthwick’s side will also help build Italy’s confidence of recording a first win over England.

Gonzalo Quesada’s side defeated Scotland in the opening round and ran out of steam to compete in the second half against Les Bleus.

Line-ups

France: Attissogbe; Drean, Gailleton, Brau-Boirie, Bielle-Biarrey; Ramos, Dupont (capt); Gros, Marchand, Aldegheri, Flament, Meafou, Cros, Jegou, Jelonch.

Replacements: Mauvaka, Neti, Colombe, Ollivon, Guillard, Nouchi, Serin, Barassi.

Italy: Fischetti; Lynagh, Menoncello, Marin; Ioane; P Garbisi, Fusco; Fischetti, Nicotera, Ferrari, N Cannone, Zambonin, Lamaro (capt), Zuliani, L Cannone.

Replacements: Dimcheff, Spagnolo, Zilocchi, Ruzza, Favretto, Odiase, Garbisi, Odogwu.

Match officials

Referee: Andrew Brace (Ire)

Assistant Referees: Luke Pearce (Eng) and Eoghan Cross (Ire)

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Trump’s Push for Greenland

As Donald Trump threatens Greenland with a takeover, Al Jazeera speaks to people there about their concerns.

At the start of 2026, President Donald Trump caused an international uproar by aggressively pushing for the United States to take control of Greenland – a vast, icy and sparsely inhabited autonomous Danish Arctic territory – arguing its strategic military importance and mineral resources made it essential for national security.

As Danish and Greenlandic leaders pushed back, Trump increased his rhetoric, threatening European countries that had sent a small number of troops to the island with economic tariffs.

Chelsea, Arsenal and Man City into Women’s FA Cup last eight

Ciara Fleming

BBC Sport journalist
  • 1 Comments

Holders Chelsea edged past Manchester United into the FA Cup quarter-finals thanks to an extra-time tap-in from defender Naomi Girma.

The United States international prodded home from close range in the 99th minute to open her goal account for the Blues after the visitors had failed to clear their lines from a corner.

It was a disappointing end to the tie for Marc Skinner’s side, who had battled from behind to take the contest into extra-time.

Substitute Simi Awujo arrived at the back post on 81 minutes to cancel out Sam Kerr’s opener – the Australian had come off the bench to steer home Veerle Buurman’s knockdown three minutes prior.

Chelsea had beaten United in last season’s final and victory will hand Sonia Bompastor’s side a psychological edge over the Red Devils before they meet again in the League Cup final at Ashton Gate on 15 March.

Elsewhere, captain Kim Little scored for a second FA Cup tie in a row as 14-time winners Arsenal claimed a 3-0 victory over Bristol City.

Victoria Pelova and Frida Maanum were also on target in a second half that was blighted by a head injury to winger Olivia Smith, who was stretchered off.

Manchester City are also through after ruthlessly despatching second-tier Sheffield United 4-0.

The Women’s Super League leaders raced into a three-goal lead inside 22 minutes thanks to two close-range finishes from Lauren Hemp, and a low drive from Aoba Fujino. Laura Coombs poked home their fourth in the 90th minute.

Brighton ran out 2-1 winners at West Ham in another all-WSL tie, as manager Dario Vidosic returned to the dugout.

The 38-year-old has been away from the team in Australia for the past month after the passing of his father Rado, who was also Brighton’s women’s and girls’ head of coaching.

Veteran Fran Kirby rolled back the years with a goal and assist in a commanding first-half display, with Leila Wandeler’s 75th-minute goal unable to inspire a West Ham fightback.

Birmingham City and Charlton Athletic prevailed in the only ties not involving top-flight clubs.

Oceane Hurtre scored a hat-trick in an 8-0 rout for the Blues over Chatham Town on Friday night, while the Addicks edged out fourth-tier Oxford thanks to Lucy Fitzgerald’s 76th-minute penalty.

Women’s FA Cup fifth-round results

When is quarter-final draw?

The draw for the quarter-finals will take place on Monday, 23 February at 19:00 GMT on TNT Sports 1 and the Adobe Women’s FA Cup YouTube channel.

Ellen White, Jen Beattie and Ben Haines

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National Assembly Highlights Key Reforms In Electoral Act 2026

The National Assembly has outlined major reforms introduced in the Electoral Act 2026, including mandatory electronic transmission of results, compulsory use of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS), the creation of a dedicated fund for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), and stricter regulations for political parties.

Leader of the Senate, Opeyemi Bamidele, in a statement released by the Directorate of Media and Public Affairs in his office, said the new electoral framework was the product of two years of consultations involving INEC, the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation (OAGF), civil society organisations (CSOs), and development partners.

According to him, the National Assembly harmonised versions of the Electoral Bill 2026 passed by both chambers, particularly Clause 60(3), before transmitting it to President Bola Tinubu for assent in order to avert a constitutional crisis ahead of preparations for the 2027 general elections.

READ ALSO: Tinubu Signs Electoral Act 2026 Into Law, Says ‘We Need To Avoid Glitches, Unnecessary Hacking’

The President signed the bill into law within 24 hours, completing what lawmakers described as a two-year reform process.

Financial Autonomy for INEC

Bamidele explained that Section 3 of the Act establishes a dedicated fund for INEC to guarantee its financial autonomy, operational stability and administrative continuity. The law also mandates the release of election funds at least six months before a general election and expands INEC’s authority to review result declarations made under duress or procedural violations.

Technology-Driven Electoral Process

Under Section 47, the Act makes it mandatory for presiding officers to use BVAS or any other technological device prescribed by INEC for voter accreditation.

Section 60(3) provides for the compulsory electronic transmission of results to the INEC Result Viewing Portal (IReV), while Section 60(6) prescribes a six-month jail term or a fine of ₦500,000 — or both — for any presiding officer who wilfully frustrates the electronic transmission of results.

The Senate Leader clarified that while IReV enhances transparency, it is not a collation platform. He added that the law permits the use of Form EC8A where electronic transmission fails due to communication challenges.

Sanctions and Administrative Provisions

Section 74(1) mandates Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) to release certified true copies of documents within 24 hours of payment, with failure attracting a minimum two-year imprisonment without the option of fine.

Section 72(2) provides that a certified true copy of a court order is sufficient for swearing in a candidate declared winner by a court if INEC fails to issue a certificate of return.

Under Section 125(1-2), the Act prescribes a two-year jail term or fines ranging between ₦500,000 and ₦2 million — or both — for offences such as vote buying, impersonation and result manipulation.

Reforms to Party Primaries

The Act eliminates indirect primaries and retains only direct and consensus primaries under Section 84 (1-2).

Section 77 (1-7) requires political parties to maintain a digital register of members, issue membership cards, and submit the register to INEC at least 21 days before conducting primaries, congresses or conventions. Parties that fail to comply will be barred from fielding candidates in the affected election.

Revised Campaign Spending Limits

Section 92(1-8) raises campaign spending limits as follows:

Presidential: ₦10 billion (from ₦5 billion)

Governorship: ₦3 billion (from ₦1 billion)

Senate: ₦500 million

House of Representatives: ₦250 million

House of Assembly: ₦100 million

Area Council: ₦60 million

Councillorship: ₦10 million

The Act also imposes a ₦10 million fine on any political party that fails to submit accurate audited returns within the stipulated period.

Inclusion Measures

The legislation introduces additional safeguards, including provisions under Section 49 for gender-separated queues in areas where cultural practices require it, and Section 54, which establishes support mechanisms for persons with visual impairment.

England’s ‘Jack of all trades’ delivers for Brook again

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Matthew Henry

BBC Sport Journalist in Pallekele
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Will Jacks has already had quite the winter.

He made his Ashes debut in Australia, got engaged to his partner Ana in Sydney and now, at times single-handedly, is taking England towards the T20 World Cup semi-finals.

Which would he rank as his best moment?

“That is not for me to answer,” laughed his captain Harry Brook.

Brook and Jacks go back a long way.

They were 15-year-olds when they played against each other at the famous Bunbury Festival – Jacks playing for the London schools’ side and Brook the north of England.

Jacks made 46. Brook took two wickets.

Four years later they were roommates with the Under-19s and now Jacks is keeping Brook’s first World Cup campaign as captain afloat.

When this tournament began with questions around Brook’s suitability to be captain after off-field controversy in Wellington, it was Jacks who was put forward to speak to the media to defend his mate.

Against Nepal, the right-hander hit 39 not out, without which England would have suffered one of the great World Cup shocks, and his first T20 fifty against Italy, a powerful 53 not out, pushed a tight game out of the reach of the Italians in their valiant chase.

His 21 with the bat and three wickets with the ball against Sri Lanka was another gift for Brook, coming on the captain’s 27th birthday.

England now sit one win from a World Cup semi-final.

“He is a very competitive lad,” said Brook. “He was annoyed when he got out tonight.

“After his first over he said ‘I always bowl better when I am annoyed’. That was one of the reasons I kept him on.

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Jacks’ Ashes was not all fairytale proposals below Sydney Harbour Bridge.

Off the field, he was one of the England players plastered across the front page of the Australian newspapers with a pint in hand in Noosa.

On it, he struggled with his two wickets in the third Test against Australia in Adelaide costing 212 runs. Across the series he took six wickets for 394 runs.

Jacks’ stubborn batting in Australia did show a side of his game that hinted at promise and now he is thriving as England’s T20 man for all seasons.

Backed by Brook on Sunday he was asked to open the bowling for England for the first time since a match against Australia in Barbados at the last T20 World Cup.

That day, after what Jos Buttler later described as a “gut feel”, Aussie opener Travis Head – the man who cut and pulled him into submission in Adelaide – sent him onto the Kensington Oval roof in an over that cost 22 runs. England’s campaign never recovered.

This time his opening over cost only four, even that a boundary courtesy of a misfield.

Brook said it was a “last-minute” decision to give Jacks the new ball, the logic being that with a shorter boundary to the left-handed Kamil Mishara’s leg side it was better to have Jacks’ off-spin turning the ball away.

Typically, after that good first over, Jacks dismissed two right-handers in his next – the dangerous Kusal Mendis poking and chipping back a catch and Pavan Rathnayake charging and slicing a catch high to the off-side ring.

“Rathnayake’s been a very good player for them, and probably their best player of spin – the way that he runs down the pitch,” Brook said.

“To get him out first ball was a very crucial part in the game for us.”

Control was something often lacking with Jacks’ off-spin during the winter but here he delivered his most accurate spell.

Bowling four overs on the spin, he pitched 91% of his deliveries on the stumps or in the channel – the highest of any England match of his career.

If his first three wickets put England on course for victory, the dismissal of Shanaka confirmed it.

“I love getting the responsibility with the ball,” Jacks said.

“It encourages me to get into the game and perform better.

“[Opening the bowling] is not foreign for me. And with a surface like that, I come in knowing what to do.”

Jacks has been given the nickname of Slim Shady by some England players during this tournament – a reference to his pre-tournament haircut and bleached blond hair. In the dressing room he has even been asked to rap.

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Wild celebrations as USA beat Canada in overtime to win gold

Team USA’s men follow in the lead of the women’s ice hockey team, beating Canada 2-1 in overtime to win the gold medal, as both American sides leave Milano-Cortina 2026 as Olympic champions.

MATCH REPORT: USA win men’s Olympic ice hockey gold for first time in 46 years