Archive November 10, 2025

Molly Mae Hague reveals raunchy way she starts the day with Tommy Fury

Molly-Mae Hague has revealed how she starts the day with her Love Island partner Tommy Fury after the pair rekindled their romance at the turn of the year

Love Island couple Molly Mae Hague and Tommy Fury seem very much the happy pair again after a short separation. And now the Maebe founder has cheekily revealed how she starts the day with her boxing beau.

After splitting last year following a five-year relationship, Molly and Tommy rekindled their romance over the new year period. Molly has now revealed the duo are in a healthy, happy place and shared a look into their life on her latest vlog.

Taking to her weekly YouTube channel, she was seen with Tommy as the pair messed around playfully. The pugilist told viewers he enjoys starting the day with a cold showers, which helps him “mentally lock in”.

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Despite his comments, he asked Molly not to use his admission in her upload. However, she insisted as she laughed: “Best believe I’m using all of it!”

In the clip, Tommy was seen standing in front of the shower cubicle. And Molly explained the duo, who are parents to two-year-old Bambi, often shower together in the morning.

Basically, TMI, but we actually have a shower together pretty much every day,” she explained. “Because we both get in the shower at the same time and there is two shower heads in there.

“So we just shower but separately at the same time because we just our shower times cross over.”

And fans were loving seeing the pair on such good terms again after seemingly ending their partnership. In the comments section of the upload, one user gushed: “My heart melts seeing you all together.”

Molly also opened up on the issues she is facing as she looks to sell her lavish home. In her latest dilemma while on a video post on social media, Molly told fans that she is in a quandary when it comes to the sale of her £3.8million house.

She admitted she doesn’t want to let it go but knows she has to. Speaking on the vlog, she said: “Like I still don’t know what I’m doing in terms of this house.”

She added that there are “a lot of big decisions need to be made in terms of what I’m going to do with this house, and I’ve mentioned it [but] I don’t want to sell it.

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“I don’t particularly want to rent it out,” she said, “but then equally, what am I keeping it for? I don’t know. I just don’t, I really, really don’t know.

“Like there’s some things, that I know in my mind like I’m ready to do, and I want to do, but like in terms of this house…This house will always be so incredibly sentimental to me.”

Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy to be released from prison

Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy is to be released from prison after serving three weeks of a five-year sentence for criminal conspiracy.

A Paris court ruled on Monday that Sarkozy, 70, will be placed under judicial supervision pending an appeal against his conviction.

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He is banned from leaving France and could be required to wear an electronic tag while living at home.

In September, Sarkozy was found guilty of criminal conspiracy for his role in efforts to secure funding for his 2007 presidential campaign from the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.

He was acquitted of separate charges of corruption and illegal campaign financing.

Sarkozy was sent to La Sante prison in Paris on October 21, where, reports said, he was mocked by other inmates.

Appearing via videolink from prison on Monday, Sarkozy described his time behind bars as “very hard” and “exhausting”, insisting he had been the target of political vengeance.

“I had never imagined I would experience prison at 70,” he said. “This ordeal was imposed on me, and I lived through it. It’s hard, very hard. I would even say it’s gruelling.”

During a 50-minute hearing, the former president again denied all wrongdoing. “I will never confess to something I didn’t do,” he told the court. “I am fighting for the truth to prevail.”

He was accompanied in court by his wife, Carla Bruni, and his sons Pierre and Jean. Just after 1:30pm (12:30 GMT), the court’s president declared the application for release admissible and placed Sarkozy under judicial supervision.

Under the terms of his release, Sarkozy has been barred from contacting Minister of Justice Gerald Darmanin. He will face an appeal trial expected next year.

Under French law, defendants are generally released pending appeal unless deemed a flight risk or a danger to public order.

Prosecutors have accused Sarkozy of promising to help rehabilitate the image of Gaddafi internationally in exchange for campaign funding. Libya was still facing global condemnation at the time for the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, an attack on a passenger plane that killed 270 people.

While the court ruled that Sarkozy had conspired to secure funds, it did not establish that he had personally received or used them in his 2007 campaign.

IOC closer to ban on trans women in female events

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The International Olympic Committee has moved a step closer to introducing a blanket ban on transgender women from female categories across all sports.

IOC president Kirsty Coventry vowed to bring in the policy as part of her election campaign, and set up a working group on the protection of women’s sport.

The IOC said that the review is “continuing its discussions on this topic and no decisions have been taken yet”.

However, after a presentation by its medical chief, sources have told BBC Sport told that a ban is likely to be introduced in 2026.

Last week, the IOC’s medical and scientific director Dr Jane Thornton updated its members as the organisation works through the details of the potential move.

As first reported by The Times, she revealed that initial findings of the science-based review suggested that athletes born male retain physiological advantages, even after reducing testosterone levels, fuelling expectations of a new policy.

BBC Sport has been told any blanket ban is unlikely to be introduced before the 2026 Winter Olympics, but could be brought in before the Los Angeles Games in 2028.

Back in March, former swimmer Coventry – a seven-time Olympic medallist – told BBC Sport that the IOC must “play a leading role” in discussions in this area, hinting at a major shift in approach.

The IOC has previously left sex eligibility regulations to the governing bodies of individual sports, rather than applying a universal approach, with many allowing transgender women athletes to compete in female competition if they lowered their testosterone levels.

After being elected, Coventry said a working group on the issue made up of experts and international federations would “ensure that we find consensus”.

She added that IOC members had shown “overwhelming support” to protecting the female category in sport.

Transgender athletes in sport

In recent years a growing number of sports federations have barred athletes who have undergone male puberty from competing in elite female competition amid concerns over fairness and safety, including World Aquatics and World Athletics.

The moves have been opposed by trans rights campaigners who argue they could violate human rights, and insist inclusion should be prioritised.

This year, US President Donald Trump signed an executive order that prevents transgender women from competing in female categories.

He said it would include the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles and that he will deny visas for transgender athletes trying to visit the US to compete at the Games.

Previous controversy

New Zealand’s Laurel Hubbard became the first openly transgender women to compete at an Olympics after being selected for the women’s weightlifting team at Tokyo 2020.

Hubbard, who failed to record a successful lift in the women’s +87kg category, had competed in men’s events before coming out as transgender in 2013.

Dr Thornton’s presentation also covered recent approaches to athletes with DSD. This is a term for a group of rare conditions, whereby a person’s hormones, genes and/or reproductive organs may be a mix of male and female characteristics. Some can be born with external female genitalia but functioning testes, and are often certified as female at birth and raised as such.

Both World Athletics and World Boxing have introduced genetic sex screening this year, claiming it is needed to protect the integrity of women’s competition.

The Paris 2024 Olympics were engulfed in controversy after Algeria’s Imane Khelif won the women’s welterweight boxing gold medal, a year after being disqualified from the World Championships for reportedly failing a gender eligibility test.

The IOC cleared the 25-year-old to compete – along with Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting, who was also banned by the suspended International Boxing Association (IBA).

The IOC said competitors were eligible for the women’s division if their passports said they were female.

Both fighters said they were women, had always competed in the women’s division, and there was no suggestion they were transgender.

Gabby Logan addresses shift in marriage after ‘weird’ change left her in tears

BBC presenter Gabby Logan admitted the family transition felt “weird” as she navigates a new chapter with her husband of 24 years, Kenny Logan

Gabby Logan has opened up about a positive turn in her marriage to former rugby star Kenny Logan. The couple are currently adjusting to life with an empty nest after their 19-year-old twins Reuben and Lois embarked on their own career journeys.

Lois, a jockey, headed back to her university in Leicestershire for her second year in September. This comes after Gabby previously admitted to being in floods of tears after saying goodbye to her daughter last year.

Meanwhile, Reuben has followed his dad’s rugby path. Back in April, Sale Sharks revealed they had snapped up the Scotland Under-20 forward on a two-year deal from Northampton Saints.

Before their children flew the nest, Gabby confessed the adjustment was “going to feel a bit weird”. However, the 52-year-old has now embraced the change by enjoying more precious moments with her husband.

Speaking to Hello! Magazine, she revealed: “We did some lovely trips this summer because Reuben was playing for the under-20s World Cup, so we went to Verona, Milan, just quick trips, two nights to watch the match.

“It was so nice because we had the purpose of being there to watch the game, but we didn’t get to hang out with him, because he was with the team.

“So we’d watch him, give him a cuddle afterwards, and then we’d go back to the lovely hotel, have dinner together.

“I’m looking forward to spending more little trips like that, just the two of us.”

Previously speaking about their marriage, Gabby opened up about the hurdles they’ve encountered and how they’ve navigated them.

“In any relationship, you’re going to have ups and downs,” she told Bella Magazine.

“We have differences in our opinions, but we are grown-up enough to discuss them.”

She added: “It’s knowing how to communicate through those challenging times, finding a common ground and having a sense of humour.”

One of the most challenging obstacles they confronted together was Kenny’s fight against prostate cancer in 2022.

The father-of-two chose to get examined after listening to Gabby discussing women’s health struggles on her The MidPoint podcast.

He told The Telegraph: “I thought, ‘What can men do for their own health?’ We need to take responsibility, too.”

Without an NHS prostate screening programme available, Kenny opted for a private examination, which involved having his PSA levels checked.

While he experienced no symptoms at the time, a biopsy subsequently confirmed his diagnosis after his PSA level climbed to over seven.

“That news left me and Gabby reeling,” he admitted. “I’ve played sports all my life so I’m fit, I eat well and have never smoked. I’ve mostly drunk in moderation.

“Yet, as the doctor said to me, prostate cancer isn’t caused by lifestyle, there is nothing to ‘blame’, and what’s more, it’s often entirely symptomless, as mine had been.

“I was two months shy of my 50th birthday at that time, I felt entirely well, and it was all such a shock that I almost fell over.”

Following his choice to have his prostate removed, the 53-year-old felt “95% back to normal” three months post-operation and received the all-clear.

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Thailand suspends Cambodia peace deal after landmine blast

Thailand has suspended the implementation of a United States-brokered peace agreement with neighbouring Cambodia after a landmine blast near their border injured two of its soldiers.

Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said after Monday’s incident that all action set to be carried out under the truce will be halted until Thailand’s demands, which remain unspecified, are met.

“The hostility towards our national security has not decreased as we thought it would,” Anutin asserted. He did not elaborate on what Thailand’s demands were.

There was no immediate response from the Cambodian government.

Simmering

Thailand and Cambodia signed a ceasefire on the sidelines of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit in Malaysia last month after territorial disputes between the two Southeast Asian countries led to five days of border clashes in July.

Those hostilities killed at least 43 people and displaced more than 300,000 civilians living along the border.

The Thai army said in a statement that Monday’s mine explosion in Sisaket province injured two soldiers.

Thai Defence Minister Natthaphon Narkphanit said the army is still investigating whether the mine was newly laid.

Thailand has previously accused Cambodia of laying new mines in violation of the truce, a charge that the Cambodian government denies.

Similar landmine explosions have occurred both before and since the deal, and tension has simmered.

Under the terms of the ceasefire, Thailand should release 18 Cambodian soldiers, and both sides must begin removing heavy weapons and land mines from the border.

Natthaphon said Thailand will postpone the release of the Cambodian soldiers, initially scheduled for this week.

The two sides have reported some progress on arms removal, but Thailand has accused Cambodia of obstructing mine clearance.

Cambodia said it’s committed to all terms of the truce and urged Thailand to release its soldiers as soon as possible.

Complex issues

Thailand and Cambodia agreed to a truce mediated by Malaysia in July after US President Donald Trump threatened to impose tariffs.

The dispute is among eight conflicts that Trump has taken credit for resolving, although critics have noted that the peace deals he has helped to initiate often implant swift and simplistic ceasefires, leaving complex issues behind the conflicts unresolved and likely to reignite hostilities.

While the Thai-Cambodian truce has generally held since July 29, both countries have traded allegations of ceasefire breaches.

No decision over ban on transgender women – IOC

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The International Olympic Committee says no decision has been taken on whether to introduce a blanket ban on transgender women from female categories across all sports.

IOC president Kirsty Coventry previously vowed to bring in the move as part of her election campaign.

On Monday the Times reported that the ban was set to be announced as early as next year.

Despite the IOC statement, the likely outcome is that such a ban will be introduced.

Last week an update was presented by the organisation’s medical and scientific director to members as it works through the details of the potential move.

Coventry told BBC Sport in June that the IOC must “play a leading role” in discussions in this area.

At the time she revealed a working group on the issue made up of experts and international federations would “ensure that we find consensus”.

In February US President Donald Trump signed an executive order that prevents transgender women from competing in female categories.