Archive December 12, 2025

Sophie Kasei drops major hint about baby’s gender in pregnancy struggle update

The Only Way Is Essex star Sophie Kasaei has given a candid update into her pregnancy with Jordan Brooks, and fans think they know what she’s having because of one key symptom

Sophie Kasaei has left fans convinced they know the gender of her unborn baby after she opened up about her first-trimester pregnancy symptoms. The Geordie Shore-turned-The Only Way Is Essex star and her partner Jordan Brook are currently expecting their first child together after a difficult two-year IVF journey.

The 34-year-old reality star and Jordan announced the happy news on Sunday (December 7), describing it as “the most magical gift” in an emotional video on Instagram, which also involved their beloved pet dog Bella. The montage of clips included footage of them looking at their positive pregnancy test before unwrapping a “Baby Brook Coming 2026” blanket gift-wrapped in Christmas paper.

READ MORE: Which? expert says common cleaning product is ‘not allowed’ in her house

In a new video posted to her TikTok this week, which she filmed when she was six weeks pregnant, Newcastle-born Sophie discussed some of her early symptoms – leaving many fans convinced they now know the gender.

After explaining that she was still very early in the pregnancy and was “so grateful”, Sophie told her 680,000 followers, “My symptoms are so bad right now. My skin… you can see the breakout. I can’t eat, I look in the fridge… I just want beige,” adding that she was craving “chips and curry sauce” from the chippy.

“I feel so nauseous. But, obviously, I’m just so over the moon that this is happening, so all the symptoms are just such a blessing to us right now. But it’s hard and I am struggling because nobody ever talks about this bit. And nobody ever speaks about this bit, because everything is kept so secretive until obviously about 12 weeks. My life right now is just sitting on the sofa trying to not vomit, thinking about what I can eat but not hungry.”

She also said she was struggling to sleep at night and experiencing intense thirst, and as a result was “going to the toilet for a wee every second”.

Writing in the comments, one fan said: “Deffo having a little girl! Feel like nausea is always worse with girls!”, and another added, “I was so sick with my daughter I really went off food like meat. My go to was coco pops. I think your having a little girl.”

Although not everyone voted pink, with many others adding comments such as “Mine was worth with boys”, and “Mine worse with boys and I loved chippys and curry/gravy.”

Speaking exclusively to The Mirror at the summer’s National Television Awards, Sophie and Jordan, who started dating in November 2022, spoke about how badly they wanted to start a family after going through their difficult fertility journey.

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“This Christmas is all about family and we’re actually going to be spending it abroad for the first time in a long time,” Jordan told us, before Sophie added “Our dream is just to wake up on Christmas Day and just have a little bump. That is all I really, really want in life. So I’m praying it happens this year. And it will, it will.”

FA to send fans’ World Cup ticket concerns to Fifa

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The Football Association will contact Fifa to relay fans’ concerns after it was asked to lobby the world governing body to lower the price of World Cup tickets.

The Football Supporters’ Association (FSA) says the pricing structure for next year’s tournament in the United States, Canada and Mexico is “scandalous”.

It has joined Football Supporters Europe (FSE) in demanding that the sales process is stopped so fans’ groups can hold talks with Fifa over its pricing policy.

“We back Football Supporters Europe in calling for a halt in ticket sales and we are calling on the Football Association to work with fellow FAs to directly challenge these disgraceful prices,” the FSA said in a statement.

“We call on all national associations to stand up for your supporters, without whom there would be no professional game.”

Fifa, the FA and the Scottish FA are all yet to officially comment.

BBC Sport has been told that the FA is aware that England fans are angry, and is planning to pass on those concerns to Fifa.

There is a Fifa Council meeting in Doha next week, and FA Chair Debbie Hewitt will be present. Last month she said that she was opposed to dynamic ticket pricing, and has vowed that it will not be used at Euro 2028, which the UK and Ireland is hosting.

Despite mounting pressure, Fifa has also not yet made any public comment on its ticket price policies.

That may change if a number of national football associations jointly raise concerns, but with the Home Nations FAs hoping to host the 2035 Women’s World Cup, they (and the UK government) may also be wary of upsetting Fifa.

BBC Sport has been told that Fifa is waiting to see how many people have entered the ballot, but that it is expecting strong demand.

Privately, Fifa insiders say that while tickets will seem expensive to many, the governing body has a duty to set prices with the US market in mind, grow the game around the world, and to use its revenues to develop men’s, women’s and youth football.

Fifa president Gianni Infantino has also promised to achieve record revenues, and the most lucrative sports event in history will do no harm to his re-election hopes in 2027.

The huge increase in the price of tickets was revealed on Thursday when Fifa released allocation details for the official supporters’ groups of each country.

At the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, group stage fixtures all had set prices of £68.50, £164.50 or £219.

But for England v Croatia and Scotland v Brazil next year, tickets cost around £198, £373 or £523.

The cost ramps up considerably in the latter stages.

Quarter-finals for all teams are £507, £757 and £1,073, with the semi-finals £686, £1,819 and £2,363.

The cheapest tickets for the final are £3,119, seven times more expensive than in Qatar.

Ticket prices a ‘laughable insult’ to supporters

The cheapest tickets are in the ‘supporter value’ category, which the FSA called “a laughable insult to your average fan”.

The FSA added that supporters felt they had been “stabbed in the back” and that loyal fans will now likely be missing in the US, Mexico and Canada because the matches will be “unaffordable” to most.

“This is a tournament that is supposed to be celebrated by the world, where fans of all nations come together for the love of football,” the FSA said. “Fifa has decided to make it all about the money and the elite who can afford it.

“For Fifa, loyalty is not the hard-working fan travelling thousands of miles in support of their team at qualifiers around the continent. A game that should be for all is now only for those who can afford it.

“Who needs to follow England away for disappointment when Fifa can deliver that six months before a ball is kicked? The life has been sucked out of this tournament before it starts.”

It will cost about £5,225 for a supporter to follow their team through to the final if they were to attend all eight matches in the cheapest ticket category.

That rises to about £8,850 in the mid-price range, or £12,357 for the top tier.

FSE demands talks over ‘extortionate’ ticket prices

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FSE has called on Fifa to stop the ticket sale process, believing it needs to rethink the pricing policy.

“In the price tables gradually and confidentially released by Fifa, tickets allocated to national associations… are reaching astronomical levels,” it said in a statement.

“Adding insult to injury, the lowest price category will not be available to the most dedicated supporters through their national associations [because] Fifa chose to reserve the scarce number of category four tickets to the general sales, subject to dynamic ticket pricing.

“For the first time in World Cup history, no consistent price will be offered across all group stage games. Instead, Fifa is introducing a variable pricing policy dependent on vague criteria such as the perceived attractiveness of the fixture.

“Fans of different national teams will therefore have to pay different prices for the same category at the same stage of the tournament, without any transparency on the pricing structure enforced by Fifa.”

The Football Supporters’ Association’s England Fans’ Embassy said: “These prices are a slap in the face to supporters who support their team outside of the flagship tournament that appears every four years.

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Liverpool vs Brighton: Premier League – teams, start time, lineups, Salah

Who: Liverpool vs Brighton
What: English Premier League
Where: Anfield in Liverpool, United Kingdom
When: Saturday, December 9, at 3pm (15:00)
How to follow: We’ll have all the buildup on Al Jazeera Sport from 12:00 GMT in advance of our text commentary stream.

All eyes will be on the Liverpool team sheet when it is released at roughly the same time the bus carrying the squad will arrive at Anfield for the Brighton match on Saturday.

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Speculation is rife that the Premier League match could be Mohamed Salah’s last for the defending champions, following the public fallout with the club.

The Reds, and their beleaguered manager Arne Slot, will hope the focus is very much on the football and turning around a form book that has seen the Merseyside club fall to 10th in the table.

Al Jazeera Sport takes a closer look at a game that will be the focus of the Saturday agenda in the English top flight, and beyond.

What is the latest on Salah’s future at Liverpool?

Salah has not started a game for Liverpool since the 4-1 defeat at PSV Eindhoven in the UEFA Champions League on November 26.

The Egyptian forward was benched for the following three Premier League games and, following fierce criticism of the club’s treatment of him, was then dropped from the squad that travelled to Italy to face Inter Milan on Tuesday – a game the Reds won 1-0.

Speculation has mounted surrounding a move to the Saudi Pro League since Salah’s outburst following last Saturday’s 3-3 draw at Leeds United, when the 33-year-old claimed he had been “thrown under the bus” for their recent woes on the field.

Liverpool manager Arne Slot said on Friday morning that he would speak with Salah to decide whether the forward would return to the match-day squad for the Brighton game.

The eyes and ears of the world, and in particular in Saudi Arabia, will be on the Anfield club for news of the team and the squad before kickoff against Brighton on Saturday.

What has Liverpool’s form been in the Premier League this season?

The Reds have lost six of their games in the Premier League this season – part of a run that saw them lose nine of 12 games in all competitions.

The struggling title holders have taken five points from their last three league games, however, starting with a 2-0 win at West Ham – the first game of Salah’s exile from the starting lineup.

The last two matches, though, have seen the Reds held to a 1-1 home draw by newly promoted Sunderland, before the draw at Leeds that led to Salah’s outburst.

What has Brighton’s form been in the Premier League this season?

Brighton’s solid season sees them sit two places above Liverpool on goal difference.

A win for either side could result in them climbing as high as fourth.

One league win in five to begin the season left the Seagulls sitting slightly perilously, but a run of only two defeats in 11 in the English top flight followed, with six wins in that time.

That form had expectations flying high on the south coast before two home games, but a 4-3 defeat by Aston Villa was followed by a 1-1 draw with West Ham in their last match.

What happened the last time Liverpool played Brighton?

Brighton were 3-2 winners in a Premier League fixture on May 19, in the last encounter between the sides.

Liverpool twice took the lead in the first half of the game at Amex Stadium through Harvey Elliott and Dominik Szoboszlai.

Yasin Ayari’s 31st-minute goal kept the Seagulls in the game at the break before Kaoru Mitoma and Jack Hinshelwood, who netted five minutes from time, turned the game around in the second period.

What happened in the corresponding fixture between Liverpool and Brighton last season?

Liverpool were 2-1 winners in the preceding match at Anfield last season, but were forced to come from behind after Ferdi Kadioglu gave the away team the lead in the 14th minute.

The Seagulls held the lead until the 70th minute, when Cody Gakpo and Mohamed Salah scored twice in three minutes to set up the win.

Head-to-head

This is the 44th meeting between the sides, with Liverpool winning 23 of those encounters and Brighton emerging victorious on 8 occasions.

The fixture dates back to 1907 and an FA Cup tie at Anfield, where Brighton secured a 1-1 draw. Liverpool made no mistake in the reply, however, winning 3-0 on the south coast.

Brighton would have to wait a further six games for their first win against Liverpool, a 3-1 victory in the old second division of English football (now known as the Championship).

Liverpool team news

There is a question mark over Alexander Isak’s status for Saturday, with Slot saying the forward picked up a knock in the first half against Inter Milan, and that he will be evaluated on Friday before they decide whether or not he can start.

Slot is pleased with how Isak and Hugo Ekitike have played together, saying their partnership will continue to improve.

“The more they play together, the more they will adapt to each other and the better they will cooperate,” Slot said. “I saw promising things from the both of them, it’s only the second time they’ve played together. We will see more of them playing together in the future.”

Slot will have Federico Chiesa available on Saturday after he recovered from illness, while Wataru Endo and Cody Gakpo are expected to be out for a “few weeks”.

Brighton team news

Stefanos Tzimas, Solly March, Adam Webster are all absent with knee injuries, while James Milner is also out for several months with a muscle problem.

Kaoru Mitoma will have a fitness test as he attempts a comeback from an ankle problem which has kept him out since September.

Yasin Ayari and Tom Watson could both return from knocks, but both are still being monitored at this stage.

Predicted Liverpool starting lineup:

Alisson; Gomez, Konate, van Dijk, Kerkez; Jones, Gravenberch, Mac Allister; Szoboszlai, Isak, Wirtz

Predicted Brighton starting lineup:

Eurovision winner Nemo hands back trophy as contest surrounded by controversy

Nemo became the first non-binary performer to win the Eurovision Song Contest last year, but has now said they are returning their trophy in protest over Israel’s continued participation in the event

Last year’s Eurovision Song Contest champion, Nemo, has announced they are handing back their trophy in protest at Israel’s ongoing participation in the competition.

The 26-year-old Swiss performer claimed there was a “clear conflict” between Israel’s involvement and the contest’s proclaimed values of “unity, inclusion and dignity”. Eurovision Song Contest director Martin Green expressed that the organisation was “saddened” by Nemo’s choice whilst acknowledging their right to hold such views.

Israel’s participation in Eurovision has become an increasingly contentious issue due to the Gaza conflict and voting disputes that emerged during this year’s competition. Five nations – Iceland, Spain, Ireland, Slovenia and the Netherlands – have declared they will shun next year’s contest in response to Israel being permitted to take part.

Israel has previously hailed the decision to retain its place in the competition as a “victory” against detractors who sought to silence the country and promote animosity. Nemo made history as the first non-binary artist to claim the Eurovision crown with their track The Code, which chronicles their journey to understanding their non-binary identity.

Following their triumph, Nemo spoke to the BBC about the difficulties they encountered during the contest and their belief that organisers had fallen short in supporting contestants embroiled in the controversy surrounding Israel’s 2024 inclusion.

“I felt very alone. I really hope they have things in place for the next year,” Nemo remarked at the time, leading to the introduction of several new safeguarding measures to protect participants’ mental well-being. The well-being of Eurovision’s artists and staff has been called into question.

In a statement shared on Instagram, Nemo expressed their disappointment with the European Broadcasting Union’s (EBU) decision to allow Israel to participate in the event, stating it contradicts its core values.

“Israel’s continued participation, during what the UN’s Independent International Commission of Inquiry has concluded to be a genocide, shows a clear conflict between those ideals and the decision made by the EBU,” they said, referencing a report released in September.

“Even though I am immensely grateful for the community around this contest and everything this experience has taught me both as a person and artist, today I no longer feel this trophy belongs on my shelf.”

Nemo also shared a video of them packing the trophy into a cardboard box, ready to be returned to the EBU’s headquarters in Geneva.

Responding to Nemo’s actions, Martin Green told BBC News: “We’re saddened that Nemo wishes to return their trophy which they deservedly won in 2024. We respect the deeply held views Nemo has expressed and they will always remain a valued part of the Eurovision family”.

The controversy surrounding Israel’s inclusion has sparked the biggest crisis Eurovision has ever faced. This year’s competition was further marred by voting controversies and allegations that Israel’s government attempted to sway the public vote.

This led to some competition rules being revised and tightened, after which a “large majority” of members agreed there was no. The EBU has confirmed that there is no need for a further vote on participation and that Eurovision 2026 can go ahead as planned.

Israel’s President Isaac Herzog has lauded the decision to let the country compete, describing it as an “appreciated gesture of solidarity, brotherhood, and co-operation”.

Addressing the boycotts, Nemo clarified that their decision to return the trophy was not about “individuals or artists”, but rather what they perceived as the use of Eurovision to “soften the image of a state accused of severe wrongdoing”.

“When entire countries withdraw, it should be clear that something is deeply wrong,” they added. “If the values we celebrate on stage aren’t lived off stage, then even the most beautiful songs become meaningless.”

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‘Drama queen’ finale as GB’s Waugh wins triathlon world title

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Britain’s Kate Waugh came through a three-way battle to win the T100 Triathlon World Championship final in Qatar.

It sealed a first ever world title in the sport for the 26-year-old.

Waugh had been top of the standings heading into event and finished clear of rivals Julie Derron of Switzerland and fellow Briton Lucy Charles-Barclay, who came third and fifth respectively.

Derron had started the day just six points behind Waugh, with Charles-Barclay a further three points back, but neither could match Waugh’s pace in the closing stages as she pulled in front.

However, the Gateshead-born triathlete was exhausted towards the end of the run and had to walk the final stretch before she collapsed to her knees.

“I’ve always been a bit of a drama queen, so perhaps that was the best way to win it I guess,” said Waugh, whose final points tally of 183 was 20 more than Derron with Charles-Barclay on 152.

Waugh finished in three hours 31.30 seconds after the swim, cycle and run – 20 seconds clear of fellow Briton, Georgia Taylor-Brown, who came second in Friday’s race and seventh in the overall standings.

She added: “Going on to the last lap I felt the floor starting to tilt a bit and I was like, ‘Oh, I’m in trouble now’.

“I just held it together and then Georgia was putting me under pressure and I luckily just got across the line.”

Success capped a remarkable debut season at the 100-kilometre distance for Waugh, who won her first T100 race in Singapore and finished on the podium in all six of her appearances.

She had moved up to the longer distance – the T100 is almost twice the Olympic triathlon distance of 51.5 km – for a fresh start after her disappointing 15th-placed finish at Paris 2024.

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  • Triathlon

‘Drama queen’ finale as GB’s Waugh wins triathlon world title

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Britain’s Kate Waugh came through a three-way battle to win the T100 Triathlon World Championship final in Qatar.

It sealed a first ever world title in the sport for the 26-year-old.

Waugh had been top of the standings heading into event and finished clear of rivals Julie Derron of Switzerland and fellow Briton Lucy Charles-Barclay, who came third and fifth respectively.

Derron had started the day just six points behind Waugh, with Charles-Barclay a further three points back, but neither could match Waugh’s pace in the closing stages as she pulled in front.

However, the Gateshead-born triathlete was exhausted towards the end of the run and had to walk the final stretch before she collapsed to her knees.

“I’ve always been a bit of a drama queen, so perhaps that was the best way to win it I guess,” said Waugh, whose final points tally of 183 was 20 more than Derron with Charles-Barclay on 152.

Waugh finished in three hours 31.30 seconds after the swim, cycle and run – 20 seconds clear of fellow Briton, Georgia Taylor-Brown, who came second in Friday’s race and seventh in the overall standings.

She added: “Going on to the last lap I felt the floor starting to tilt a bit and I was like, ‘Oh, I’m in trouble now’.

“I just held it together and then Georgia was putting me under pressure and I luckily just got across the line.”

Success capped a remarkable debut season at the 100-kilometre distance for Waugh, who won her first T100 race in Singapore and finished on the podium in all six of her appearances.

She had moved up to the longer distance – the T100 is almost twice the Olympic triathlon distance of 51.5 km – for a fresh start after her disappointing 15th-placed finish at Paris 2024.

Related topics

  • Triathlon