Archive July 1, 2025

Defender Williams signs new four-year deal with Forest

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Nottingham Forest defender Neco Williams has signed a new four-year contract which will keep him at the City Ground until the summer of 2029.

The 24-year-old Wales international joined Forest in July 2022 in a £17m switch from Liverpool and has made 107 appearances in all competitions for the Reds.

Williams, whose previous deal had been set to expire in 2026, helped the East Midlands club finish seventh in the Premier League last term as they secured a European spot for the first time since 1994-95, when they were third.

“This club has come so far in recent years, and I am proud to be on the journey,” said Williams.

“Everyone knows how ambitious our owner [Evangelos Marinakis] is, and I’m grateful to him for showing belief in me and showing belief in the club.

“The future is exciting. It’s a privilege to be playing for a football club with fans like the Forest fans.

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Brazen thief who stole Bridgerton’s Genevieve Chenneour’s phone jailed

Bridgerton star Genevieve Chenneour was left shaken after fighting off a teenage thief who attempted to steal her phone at a London coffee shop before she tackled him

The Bridgerton actress has admitted she has been left shaken following the incident

The teenager who attempted to steal Bridgerton actress Genevieve Chenneour’s phone has been jailed for 22 months. The star, who appeared as Clara Livingston in the third season of the popular Netflix series, was ambushed at Joe & The Juice in Kensington, south-west London.

The 27-year-old former Team GB athlete bravely confronted the thief, Zacariah Boulares, after he grabbed her phone off a counter. Dramatic CCTV footage captured Genevieve grabbing him before wrestling him to the ground with the aid of her then-boyfriend, scriptwriter Carlo Kureishi.

During the tussle, she reclaimed her phone and hit him with it, later stating: “They didn’t expect me to stand up for myself, but I did. ”

Bridgerton's Genevieve Chenneour Breaks Her Silence on 'Life-Changing' London Robbery, Recalls 'Battle' of 'Life and Death'
Genevieve was able to fight off the attacker with her then boyfriend(Image: Met Police)

Carlo, son of writer Hanif Kureishi, was assaulted during the scuffle and warned he would be stabbed. Recounting the ordeal at Isleworth Crown Court, Genevieve expressed how “extremely shaken” she was by the February incident.

Her victim impact statement detailed her heightened anxiety and reluctance to leave her home, saying: “I am extremely worried I might see both suspects, I felt like I emotionally shut down, and I am anxious to leave my home again. “

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She admitted her fondness for Joe & The Juice but confessed to feeling apprehensive about returning and even contemplating moving away from London due to fear. She also said she was left with concussion and claimed even her dog was “traumatised”.

The star and her then boyfriend both have fear following the attack
The star and her then boyfriend both have fear following the attack(Image: Met Police)

Echoing her feelings, Carlo shared his own unease, remarking, “I feel like being in a cafe is going to make me feel paranoid and unsafe. ” Prosecutor Alex Mullen told the court: “She ordered a drink and sat waiting for it to be made.

“While she was waiting, she noticed that the defendant walked past her. Then, a short time after, she heard a sound as if someone was very close behind her. She turned and she witnessed the defendant taking her phone from the counter. ”

She said Carlo was able to detain Boulares, but was attacked by an unknown accomplice who threatened to “f** [him] up or stab [him]. ”*

Police were called by Genevieve and other café customers as the drama unfolded. Boulares, 18, from Hounslow, admitted theft and common assault. He also pleaded guilty to stealing a handbag from a diner at Pizza Pilgrims, and a backpack from a blind couple at Five Guys all in Kensington, within ten days.

Zacariah Boulares
An application for a criminal behaviour order will be held on July 9

He has 12 previous convictions for 28 offence,s including threatening Songs of Praise presenter Aled Jones with a 20-inch machete during a Rolex robbery in 2022. Aled, 52, was out with his son when Boulares, then 16, told him: “Give me your f*king Rolex or I will cut your arm off. ”

After handing over the £17k Daytona, they tried to follow him – only for Boulares to threaten: “Walk the other way or I will cut your head off. ”

Boulares served just 14 months of a two-year sentence. In court this week, Boulares appeared in a grey tracksuit and flipped his middle finger at reporters after being sentenced.

Judge Martin Edmund said: “The trauma extends also to his girlfriend. You chose to adopt a systematic lifestyle of preying on those who had more than you. ”

He said Genevieve was “seriously affected, experiencing depression and anxiety to the extent that she is considering leaving London. ” In court, Boulares was handed consecutive sentences, with five months for a theft at Pizza Pilgrims, seven months for snatching Genevieve’s phone, four months for assaulting Carlo and six months for an incident at Five Guys.

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An application for a criminal behaviour order will be heard on July 9. Superintendent Owen Renowden said: “His behaviour showed a blatant disregard for others and their belongings, even going as far to admit that he only targets vulnerable people. I commend the determination of officers who brought him to justice. ”

Top Seed Sinner Eases Into Wimbledon Open Second Round

Top seed Jannik Sinner eased into the Wimbledon second round on Tuesday, brushing aside fellow Italian Luca Nardi in straight sets.

Unfazed by the searing heat, Sinner barely broke sweat in a 6-4, 6-3, 6-0 victory lasting just one hour and 48 minutes on Court One.

“I’m very happy to come back here to such a special place for me,” Sinner said.

“Playing an Italian is very unfortunate but one has to go through and luckily it was me. ”

Sinner last week insisted his surprise decision to part with two of his coaching staff on the eve of Wimbledon would not affect his bid to win the tournament for the first time.

He opted to move on from Marco Panichi and Ulises Badio, his trainer and physiotherapist, as he looks for a new direction following his painful French Open final loss to Carlos Alcaraz.

The pair had been employed by Sinner since September 2024, helping him retain the Australian Open crown in January and reach the Roland Garros showpiece in June.

Asked if the decision might jeopardise his Wimbledon challenge over the next fortnight, Sinner was adamant it would be beneficial, with coaches Simone Vagnozzi and Darren Cahill still on his staff.

READ ALSO: Alcaraz Survives, Sabalenka Cruises On Wimbledon’s Hottest Opening Day

Italy’s Jannik Sinner plays a forehand return to Italy’s Luca Nardi during their men’s singles first round tennis match on the second day of the 2025 Wimbledon Championships at The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, southwest London, on July 1, 2025. (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE

On the evidence of his dominant display against Nardi the world number one, who returned from a three-month doping ban in May, will be just fine regardless of the coaching shake-up.

“We worked a lot after Halle (grass-court tournament) on the serve and in important moments I felt I was serving very well,” Sinner said.

“First matches are never easy, so I’m very happy with the performance. It’s a new tournament, new challenges.

“If you don’t enjoy to play on these courts, I don’t know where you will enjoy. I will try to keep going. ”

Sinner has won three of the past six Grand Slams, but the 23-year-old blew a two-set lead and wasted three match points as Alcaraz staged a comeback for the ages to win the French Open final.

Sinner has failed to reach the Wimbledon final in his four visits, with a last-four appearance in 2023 ranking as his best effort.

The Italian’s Wimbledon preparations were also dented by a shock last-16 defeat against Alexander Bublik at Halle.

Playing world number 95 Nardi for the first time, Sinner had little trouble dispatching the 21-year-old in his first Grand Slam match since that bitter defeat at Roland Garros.

Sinner recently released a duet titled Polvere e Gloria, which means Dust and Glory, with renowned tenor Andrea Bocelli.

The Italian will hope he continues hitting all the right notes in his Wimbledon title bid.

‘Inspiring Hollywood, directing Pitt & a Hamilton cold call’

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Martin Donnelly cannot remember the crash that almost killed him. Not only once, but three times.

In qualifying for the Spanish Grand Prix in 1990, mechanical failure caused his Lotus to crash into the barriers at 160mph.

The scenes that came next were harrowing, as Donnelly’s stricken body, still strapped to his seat, lay in the middle of the track, surrounded by pieces and shards of his car that had been split in two by the violent impact.

When Professor Sid Watkins’, Formula 1’s key medical and safety delegate, arrived at the scene, Donnelly’s face was turning blue due to swallowing his tongue.

After stabilising his condition, he was transferred to Seville and eventually to Watkins’ hospital in London.

The Northern Ireland driver had sustained head and lung injuries, and both his legs were broken – to the point where it took Watkins’ intervention to stop Spanish surgeons amputating his left leg.

While he was in an induced coma, his organs started to fail and his heart stopped twice. His condition was so bad he was given the last rites by a priest.

It started with a phone call from a withheld number on a Saturday night in April 2023, when Donnelly was sitting watching TV in his Norfolk home.

“You know what it is like, you get these withheld calls on your mobile. I thought it was a cold caller, so I wen’t ‘Hello, who’s this? ! ‘.

“The voice at the other end said, ‘is that Martin? ‘.

“‘Yes, what do you want? ! ‘. I was almost aggressive.

“He said, ‘it’s Lewis’. ‘Lewis who? ‘.

“‘It’s Lewis Hamilton’. “

It’s the best cold call Donnelly had ever received.

The seven-time world champion, who was an executive producer, pitched the idea that Donnelly’s crash would become the back story of Brad Pitt’s character, Sonny Hayes.

Pitt ‘a really nice guy’

Donnelly had first met Pitt, the film’s star, at Silverstone when the American called him a “hero” after watching footage of his crash.

It wasn’t long before Donnelly, 61, was on set at Brands Hatch, helping to guide Kosinski about the details of a Formula 1 garage in the 1990s, including set up and the engineers’ uniform.

When the cameras were rolling, Pitt was there, standing at the front of the garage. At the other end of the car, behind the rear wing and out of camera shot, Donnelly was watching on.

And then a voice rang out.

“‘Hey Martin, where should I be standing? ‘. “

“I looked around and there was nobody else called Martin,” recalled Donnelly.

“He was asking me to direct him around the garage. I had a superstition of getting in at the left hand side and putting my left leg in first, and he does exactly the same thing in the movie.

Lewis Hamilton chats to Brad Pitt at the 2024 Abu Dhabi Grand PrixGetty Images

The film shows the aftermath of Donnelly’s crash, with Hayes’ blue helmet imposed onto the orange of the real-life driver.

If movie-goers were now aware of Donnelly’s accident, they would find it hard to believe the crash site had not been mocked up.

Such was Donnelly’s influence in the production, he was given a special mention in the film’s credits and Pitt even gave him a personal shoutout while on stage at the London premiere.

“My kids Charlotte and Owen were there and they turned to me and said ‘Dad, dad, he just mentioned your name! ‘.

“I laughed it off, saying ‘it’s just Brad’. About a third of the way through the movie he came up the steps to two empty seats and sat beside Owen, my youngest.

‘If you don’t remember it, you can’t fear it’

Despite the serious injuries sustained, Donnelly was determined to get back to Formula 1.

Weighing just 53 kilos, Donnelly visited Willi Dungl in Austria in 1991, who helped get Niki Lauda back in a Formula 1 car just six weeks after his infamous crash in 1976.

“I went there naively thinking I’d spend two months there, he would wave his magic wand and I’d be back in F1 driving cars again.

“The motivation was to get back into F1, the accident was just an inconvenience. “

He tested for Jordan at Silverstone in February 1993. There were still lingering after effects from his accident, which included nerve damage in a left leg that was now two-and-a-half inches shorter than his right.

But once he left the pitlane, he was back in his “happy place”.

“It didn’t feel like two-and-a-half-years, it felt like weeks,” Donnelly said.

“If you don’t remember the accident, you don’t fear it. “

However, unlike on the big screen, there was no Hollywood F1 return for Donnelly.

Martin DonnellyGetty Images

Just hours before his accident, Lotus had taken up an option on Donnelly to drive for them the following season with Jordan, Tyrrell and Arrows vying for his signature.

However, the crash meant he barely scratched the surface of what would have been a lucrative contract.

Donnelly had competed against, and often beaten, the likes of Damon Hill, David Coulthard, and Eddie Irvine in the junior ranks, but had to watch their careers grow while his own F1 dreams came to an end.

He added the death of Ayrton Senna at Imola in 1994 was the moment he knew it was time to halt his pursuit.

The pair were friends after racing through the junior categories together, and Senna, who stopped at the scene of Donnelly’s accident and visited him in hospital, had even offered financial support in his recovery.

“Ayrton had his millions made and he was a three-time world champion, but he had nobody to leave it to.

“He had no offspring, no wife. I thought, I’ve died three times, I’m still involved in the sport I love and had a young son at the time, so I just let it go. “

Donnelly is still involved in the sport he loves, just in a different capacity. He was a drivers’ steward for Formula 1, and still competes in the national racing and runs his own Martin Donnelly Academy in Norfolk.

“Time is a healer and you adjust your way of life.

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Flintoff not thinking about becoming England coach

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Iconic England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff says he has not thought about the prospect of replacing Brendon McCullum as head coach.

Flintoff, 47, who played 227 times for England between 1998 and 2009, was appointed coach of England Lions – the development side below the senior XI – last year as he returned to cricket following his life-threatening crash on the set of Top Gear.

He has also worked with the senior squad as an assistant and is the head coach of Northern Superchargers in The Hundred, leading to suggestions he could replace New Zealander McCullum, who is contracted until 2027.

“It’s not something I’m looking at. Baz McCullum is incredible – the best England coach,” Flintoff told the Stick to Cricket podcast.

“Honestly, at the moment, I feel as though I’m in the perfect place working with the Lions.

Flintoff led the Lions on trips to South Africa and Australia in the winter and, having been with England Under-19s for their win against India in Northampton on Monday, joined the full squad at their practice on Tuesday in Birmingham before the second Test against India.

McCullum was made England Test coach in 2022 and has overhauled the side by implementing a positive approach since. At the start of the year he also took on the role of England white-ball coach, having replaced Australian Matthew Mott who was sacked last year.

Flintoff worked under Mott on a temporary basis, first in September 2023 and then at the T20 World Cup in the Caribbean last year.

He is also a long-time friend of England managing director of men’s cricket Rob Key, who has said Flintoff would make an excellent head coach in the future.

“I’m enjoying working under Keysy,” said Flintoff, a crucial player in England’s famous 2005 Ashes win.

“It’s no secret he’s one of my best mates and he’s helped me so much in other things. With Baz, we’ve got a great relationship and the utmost respect.

“He’s unbelievable and the culture he’s created is incredible. It’s similar to what Gareth Southgate did with the football lads. “

Flintoff had largely moved away from cricket prior to his crash in December 2022, which left him with serious facial injuries.

After an initial private return – he attended matches in a balaclava at the invitation of Key – he was named head coach of the Superchargers’ men’s side in The Hundred last year and has become an increasingly public figure again.

“I’m not looking at the franchise world or anything else, although I do the Northern Superchargers which came around last year and I enjoy working with [Superchargers captain] Harry Brook on that.

“I think ‘I’ve got a job to do here’ and it’s not like ‘what’s next? ‘. “

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By sacrificing Palestine, Europe betrays itself

“Law is interpreted for friends and applied to enemies,” Italian statesman Giovanni Giolitti once said.

There are few better examples of this than the way the European Union bends over backwards to avoid addressing Israel’s severe breaches of international law and the terms of its association agreement with the bloc.

On May 20, the EU’s Foreign Affairs Council (FAC) voted  to conduct a review of whether Israel was denying Palestinians’ human rights by preventing humanitarian aid from entering Gaza.

A month later, the same body concluded: “There are indications that Israel would be in breach of its human rights obligations under Article 2 of the EU-Israel Association Agreement. ” Indications …

On June 26, EU heads of government at a European Council meeting  concluded that they “noted” those indications and invited the FAC to “continue discussions” in July.

It is understandable that some initially welcomed the vote to review the EU-Israel Association Agreement back in May. It is only human to hold on to anything that gives hope that action will finally be taken to protect the human rights of the Palestinian people.

Unfortunately, the entire “debate” over the EU-Israel  Association Agreement is simply a sham. It does not represent serious action on by the EU to address the atrocities Israel is committing in Gaza and elsewhere in the occupied Palestinian territory. It deflects growing criticism by giving the impression that the EU may finally be thinking of doing something. More importantly, it distracts from the obligations which the EU and its members are legally bound to fulfil.

Human rights pretences

Twenty months into Israel’s devastating war in Gaza, Israel’s breaches of human rights and international law are so extensive that there can be no doubt about their relevance to the EU-Israel Association Agreement.

They are so numerous that they must be organised into categories to capture the depth and breadth of destruction wrought onto  every aspect  of life in Gaza.

Israel has been accused of intentionally creating conditions calculated to destroy the possibility for Palestinian life in the Strip, which amounts to genocide. This includes domicide  and the laying to waste of Gaza’s urban landscape;   medicide – systematically dismantling the  healthcare system; scholasticide  – destroying schools, universities and libraries; ecocide  – wiping out Gaza’s agriculture and nature; econocide – the devastation of Gaza’s economy; and  unchilding  – making childhood impossible.

More than 90 percent of Gaza’s population, or 1. 9 million people, have been displaced, and in the past three months alone, over 600,000 people have been displaced again, as many as  10 times or more. A full blockade was imposed by the Israelis since March 2, and meagre aid deliveries were reinstated only in late May. Famine is widespread; 66 children have died of starvation, and more than 5,000 were hospitalised with acute malnutrition in May alone.

Under pressure from European public opinion, which is increasingly rejecting European support for Israel, the EU finally decided to do something. But that something involved a fair bit of talking and – so far – no action.

The bloc decided to vote on reviewing the EU-Israel Association Agreement. But this was nothing out of the ordinary because all association agreements should be subject to regular reviews, which can trigger either advances or scaling back  the depth and breadth of relations.

In fact, those who called for the vote knew very well that suspension of the agreement requires  a  unanimous vote by 27 member states, which is currently impossible. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and member states, such as Germany, Italy and Hungary, have made crystal clear their unwavering support for Israel. In these circumstances, hoping for a unanimous vote to suspend the agreement is close to delusional. A qualified majority vote might suspend parts of the agreement on trade, but that is the most one can hope for.

This is hardly a ringing endorsement of the Union’s commitment to human rights and “fundamental values”. Instead, public invocations by governments and officials of Article 2 of the EU-Israel Association Agreement, which states that all areas covered by the agreement itself “shall be based on respect for human rights”, are no more than empty rhetoric.

In reality, the EU never intended for these human rights conditionalities to be taken seriously. It is easy to see why; it never specified by what criteria human rights should be assessed, and it chose not to make these assessments routine, compulsory, and public.

In this way, the EU leaves itself enough space to claim it values “human rights and fundamental values” while, in fact, “interpreting away” its own rules to avoid having to take any significant action.

Empty rhetoric

Some European states have decided to take individual action, but what they have done has been just as meaningless as the EU agreement review.

The  United Kingdom suspended trade talks  with Israel, but not trade. Its recent  communique alongside France and Canada was trumpeted as “tougher” than the EU’s statements. Yet, the communique opposes only Israel’s “expansion of military operations in Gaza”: It takes issue only with the extension and intensification of Israel’s assault, not with the devastation wrought upon the Strip so far.

Nor does it mention the war crimes Israel has been accused of, or declare a commitment to uphold the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) arrest warrants  for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant.

In fact, despite the UK summoning Israel’s ambassador after its “tough” joint statement with France and Canada, it continued its  surveillance flights  over or close to Gaza’s airspace, which are suspected of gathering intelligence for the Israeli army.

France, for its part, declared it would recognise a Palestinian state in June. June came and went without recognition.

In October 2023, Spain claimed that it stopped selling weapons to Israel. In May, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez declared, “We do not do business with a genocidal state. ” And yet, a Barcelona-based think tank revealed recently the existence of more than 40 contracts  between Spanish state institutions and Israeli defence companies.

Germany, France, the UK and Italy also continue to supply weapons in breach of the spirit of international law.

If European governments  were  serious about responding to Israel’s crimes, they could do that by simply abiding by their legal obligations under the various EU treaties and international law.

The  EU Charter of Fundamental Rights  and the  Lisbon Treaty require the bloc to embed respect for “democracy, human rights and fundamental values” into all EU policies. This is why all association agreements have human rights conditionalities in the first place.

The Genocide Convention imposes a preventive duty to use “all means reasonably available” to prevent genocide. Already in January 2024, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) accepted that Palestinians’ right to be protected from genocide may be being violated.

The actions EU states can take include, but are not limited to: halting arms contracts with the Israeli government and Israeli companies; suspending intelligence cooperation; and cutting commercial, cultural and research exchanges with and funding for Israeli private and public institutions on occupied Palestinian land. They should also support the rigorous application of international law, including backing the case against Israel at the ICJ and enforcing arrest warrants issued by the ICC.

Currently, the EU is in flagrant violation of its legal duties and its own rules. That is a direct consequence of decades of ignoring gross abuses by Israel and other associated states, including Tunisia, Morocco and Egypt.

No amount of “interpreting” law or hiding behind procedure can mask the fact that the EU is in flagrant violation of its legal obligations and the spirit of its own rules. It has a track record of ignoring continued human rights abuses in associated states, including Israel, Egypt, Tunisia, Morocco, and Jordan. This track record has reached an ignominious peak since October 2023.

Inaction on Gaza reveals the limits of Europe’s commitment to its self-proclaimed values: by  sacrificing Palestine, Europe betrays itself.