Archive December 5, 2025

Second-half surge sees Ulster thump Racing 61-7

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European Challenge Cup

Ulster (14) 61

Tries: Stockdale 2, Herring, O’Toole, Stewart, Wilson, Flannery, Z Ward 2 Cons: Murphy 8

Racing 92 (7) 7

Ulster secured a commanding bonus-point win over Racing 92 in what was their first ever pool-stage game in the Challenge Cup.

On the night when Australia prop Angus Bell made his debut for the northern province, Richie Murphy’s side scored nine tries in the 61-7 victory but almost all of the damage was done in the second half.

The French visitors to the Affidea Stadium rotated heavily for the contest but took a 7-0 lead and Ulster’s advantage was just 14-7 at half-time.

The province took control of proceedings with a pair of quick-fire scores after the turn and ultimately scored 47 unanswered points in a dominant second half.

Hosts surge clear in second-half rout

Ulster's Jacob Stockdale scores a tryInpho

Although Ulster did drop down into the Challenge Cup after the pool stages in 2021 and 2024, this was their first time starting their campaign in the second-tier European competition.

The presence of high-profile visitors, who have twice visited Belfast in the Champions Cup over the previous six seasons, perhaps stripped the occasion of some of its novelty.

The French side’s team selection, however, hinted at the changed circumstances.

Eleventh in the Top 14 table, the visitors clearly had their mind on domestic matters with the likes of French internationals Romain Taofifenua and Gael Fickou not in their travelling party.

It was Racing’s Antoine Gibert, however, who opened the scoring. While, beyond one brief spell for the French side in Ulster territory, the hosts had dominated the opening exchanges, but Gibert did well to read James Hume’s intended offload for a lengthy intercept score which the fly-half converted himself.

Undeterred, Ulster continued to show patience with ball in hand with the sharp passing evidenced under new attack coach Mark Sexton this season on show when Jacob Stockdale was worked over the line for their first try of the evening after a quarter of an hour.

The game’s second quarter was a decidedly more even, and considerably scrappier, affair but Ulster took a lead into the half despite Racing creating the better opportunities.

Their second score came when Racing’s former Wales lock Will Rowlands was pinged at the ruck and Rob Herring was mauled over from the resulting kick to the corner five minutes before the turn.

Ulster’s advantage survived until the interval only after a try-saving tackle from Robert Baloucoune, a Rowlands score was chalked off for obstruction, and a goalline turnover from Nick Timoney in the closing minutes of the half.

That defensive stand loomed all the larger when Ulster scored two tries in the opening seven minutes of the second half to take control of the contest.

Tight-head prop Tom O’Toole scored an opportunistic try to provide the first two-score buffer of the evening before half-time replacement Tom Stewart was the beneficiary of another strong Ulster maul to wrap up the bonus point.

The arrival of Wallaby loose-head Bell as a second-half substitute brought one of the biggest cheers of the night from the home crowd, but it was his fellow front-row replacement Scott Wilson who crashed over as Racing’s heads began to drop approaching the hour mark.

As the game became increasingly ragged, Ulster scored five more tries across the final 13 minutes.

Line-ups

Ulster: Stockdale; Baloucoune, Hume, Postlethwaite, Z Ward; Murphy, Doak; Crean, Herring, O’Toole, Sheridan, Irvine, McCann, Timoney (capt), Augustus.

Replacements: Stewart, Bell, Wilson, Hopes, B Ward, McKee, Flannery, Moore.

Racing 92: Prisciantelli; Donguy, James, Ashvetia, Hulleu; Gibert, Labarbe; Jabea Njocke, Basse, Kharaishvili, Kpoku, Rowlands (capt), Sanconnie, Zinzen, Tagitagivalu.

Replacements: Escobar, Coetzee, Leota, Baudonne, Hill, Albuisson, Carbonneau, Espeut.

Sin bin: F Sanconnie (49-59)

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  • Irish Rugby
  • Rugby Union

Brazil Have ‘Difficult’ World Cup Group With Morocco, Says Ancelotti 

Brazil coach Carlo Ancelotti reflected on a “difficult” group after being paired with surprise 2022 semi-finalists Morocco at the 2026 World Cup draw on Friday.

The five-time winners are in Group C with Scotland — playing at a World Cup for the first time in 28 years — and Haiti, whose only previous qualification was in 1974 when they lost all three of their matches.

“Morocco were very good during the last World Cup” in Qatar, Ancelotti told Brazilian television station Sportv.

“Scotland are a solid team, very solid, (it will be) pretty difficult,” the Italian added.

Brazil will start their campaign against Morocco on June 13 before playing Haiti six days later and rounding out the group stage against Scotland on June 24.

“We have to prepare well and try to win the group,” Ancelotti said.

READ ALSO: Trump Wins FIFA’s Inaugural Peace Prize

Brazil have been far from their best since the last World Cup and are already on their fourth coach since then.

In March, they suffered a chastening 4-1 defeat to reigning world champions Argentina in their World Cup qualifying group.

Brazil played both Scotland and Morocco in the group stage in 1998 where they reached the final before losing to hosts France 3-0.

They beat Morocco 3-0 and Scotland 2-1 back then.

Six years after that they played a historic match in Port-au-Prince, running away 6-0 winners against hosts Haiti having lined up with the likes of Ronaldo and Ronaldinho.

Glasgow impress with bonus-point win at Sale in Champions Cup opener

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Investec Champions Cup

Sale (14) 21

Tries: Van Rhyn, Davies, Louw Cons: Du Preez 3

Glasgow (12) 26

Glasgow Warriors enjoyed a dream opening night in the Champions Cup with a bonus-point win away at Sale Sharks.

With the wind at their backs, Sale started the better of the two sides and raced into a 14-0 lead inside 20 minutes through Ernst van Rhyn and teenage debutant Ollie Davies.

But Glasgow responded well and hit back with two tries of their own before the break through Gregor Hiddleston and Rory Darge.

Further tries from Kyle Steyn and Stafford McDowall pushed Glasgow 26-14 ahead before Marius Louw replied as Sale threatened a late rally but the visitors held on for a precious away win.

Ollie Davies scores a try for SalePA Media

Warriors rampant after break

Sale skipper Van Rhyn went over from close range to give the hosts the lead after only two minutes before Alex Sanderson’s men were forced into an early change when centre Rekeiti Ma’asi-White was forced off with an injury.

That brought 19-year-old Davies into the action for a Champions Cup debut and his impact was immediate.

Slotting into fly-half with Rob du Preez going to centre, he ran a good supporting line to Arron Reed’s break and took the full-back’s offload to run in for a try just a few moments after coming on to make it 14-0.

With the wind and rain swirling around the CorpAcq Stadium, Glasgow went to the set-piece to get a foothold back in the game and after catching the line-out the visitors drove over the line with hooker Hiddleston the man to claim the score.

Glasgow reduced the deficit further just before the break when Darge bundled over and Adam Hastings slotted the conversion to make it 14-12 at half-time.

Glasgow took the lead for the first time two minutes into the second period after a poor Raffi Quirke box-kick was allowed to bounce then collected by number eight Jack Dempsey, who popped it back to Steyn for the skipper to burst through a weak tackle and race away to the line.

Now well in the ascendancy, Glasgow grabbed the bonus point on 54 minutes when McDowall ran through Du Preez’s attempted tackle to score on his 100th appearance as Franco Smith’s side racked up 26 unanswered points.

But just as Sale looked out of it they gave themselves a lifeline. Tom O’Flaherty almost got through a gap but when he was pulled down the ball was recycled and Louw showed good footwork to cross the whitewash, with Du Preez’s conversion making it 26-21 with 13 minutes remaining.

‘It doesn’t get much tougher than that’ – reaction

Glasgow’s Rory Darge told BBC Radio 5 Live:

“Last week I was talking about the importance of winning away in Europe. If you want to do well in this competition you have got to do well away from home and win, so we are delighted with that.

“We have come here before and done that (come back from 14-0 down) so that belief comes from having done it before. It’s not the end of the world but we don’t want to give every team a 14-0 head start, so there are things we can do better.

“The wind was a factor, the kicks were hanging in the air so the work in the first half against the wind paid dividends in the second.

What’s next?

Sale need to regroup ahead of a trip to Clermont next Saturday while Glasgow host six-time winners Toulouse.

Line-ups

Sale: Reed; O’Flaherty, Ma’asi-White, Louw, Wills; Du Preez, Quirke; McIntyre, Jibulu, John, Burrow, Bamber, Vermeulen, Van Rhyn, T Curry.

Replacements: Caine, Onasanya, Harper, Andrews, B Curry, Warr, Davies, Wehr.

Glasgow: McKay; Steyn, McDowall, Tuipulotu, Smith; Hastings, Horne; McBeth, Hiddleston, Z Fagerson, Williamson, Cummings, M Fagerson, Darge, Dempsey.

Match officials

Referee: Pierre Brousset (France)

Assistant referees: Vincent Blasco Baque (France) and Julien Caulier (France)

Related topics

  • Glasgow Warriors
  • Sale
  • Scottish Rugby
  • Rugby Union

Glasgow impress with bonus-point win at Sale in Champions Cup opener

PA Media
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Investec Champions Cup

Sale (14) 21

Tries: Van Rhyn, Davies, Louw Cons: Du Preez 3

Glasgow (12) 26

Glasgow Warriors enjoyed a dream opening night in the Champions Cup with a bonus-point win away at Sale Sharks.

With the wind at their backs, Sale started the better of the two sides and raced into a 14-0 lead inside 20 minutes through Ernst van Rhyn and teenage debutant Ollie Davies.

But Glasgow responded well and hit back with two tries of their own before the break through Gregor Hiddleston and Rory Darge.

Further tries from Kyle Steyn and Stafford McDowall pushed Glasgow 26-14 ahead before Marius Louw replied as Sale threatened a late rally but the visitors held on for a precious away win.

Ollie Davies scores a try for SalePA Media

Warriors rampant after break

Sale skipper Van Rhyn went over from close range to give the hosts the lead after only two minutes before Alex Sanderson’s men were forced into an early change when centre Rekeiti Ma’asi-White was forced off with an injury.

That brought 19-year-old Davies into the action for a Champions Cup debut and his impact was immediate.

Slotting into fly-half with Rob du Preez going to centre, he ran a good supporting line to Arron Reed’s break and took the full-back’s offload to run in for a try just a few moments after coming on to make it 14-0.

With the wind and rain swirling around the CorpAcq Stadium, Glasgow went to the set-piece to get a foothold back in the game and after catching the line-out the visitors drove over the line with hooker Hiddleston the man to claim the score.

Glasgow reduced the deficit further just before the break when Darge bundled over and Adam Hastings slotted the conversion to make it 14-12 at half-time.

Glasgow took the lead for the first time two minutes into the second period after a poor Raffi Quirke box-kick was allowed to bounce then collected by number eight Jack Dempsey, who popped it back to Steyn for the skipper to burst through a weak tackle and race away to the line.

Now well in the ascendancy, Glasgow grabbed the bonus point on 54 minutes when McDowall ran through Du Preez’s attempted tackle to score on his 100th appearance as Franco Smith’s side racked up 26 unanswered points.

But just as Sale looked out of it they gave themselves a lifeline. Tom O’Flaherty almost got through a gap but when he was pulled down the ball was recycled and Louw showed good footwork to cross the whitewash, with Du Preez’s conversion making it 26-21 with 13 minutes remaining.

‘It doesn’t get much tougher than that’ – reaction

Glasgow’s Rory Darge told BBC Radio 5 Live:

“Last week I was talking about the importance of winning away in Europe. If you want to do well in this competition you have got to do well away from home and win, so we are delighted with that.

“We have come here before and done that (come back from 14-0 down) so that belief comes from having done it before. It’s not the end of the world but we don’t want to give every team a 14-0 head start, so there are things we can do better.

“The wind was a factor, the kicks were hanging in the air so the work in the first half against the wind paid dividends in the second.

What’s next?

Sale need to regroup ahead of a trip to Clermont next Saturday while Glasgow host six-time winners Toulouse.

Line-ups

Sale: Reed; O’Flaherty, Ma’asi-White, Louw, Wills; Du Preez, Quirke; McIntyre, Jibulu, John, Burrow, Bamber, Vermeulen, Van Rhyn, T Curry.

Replacements: Caine, Onasanya, Harper, Andrews, B Curry, Warr, Davies, Wehr.

Glasgow: McKay; Steyn, McDowall, Tuipulotu, Smith; Hastings, Horne; McBeth, Hiddleston, Z Fagerson, Williamson, Cummings, M Fagerson, Darge, Dempsey.

Match officials

Referee: Pierre Brousset (France)

Assistant referees: Vincent Blasco Baque (France) and Julien Caulier (France)

Related topics

  • Glasgow Warriors
  • Sale
  • Scottish Rugby
  • Rugby Union

BUCKTIN: ‘Meghan’s silence has been pierced by crisis as dad Thomas fights for life’

“For the first time in years, father and daughter are no longer separated by bitterness. They are connected again by something far more human.”

For seven long years, the relationship between Meghan Markle and her father has played out in headlines, interviews, recriminations and a deep, unbroken silence.

Now, at last, that silence appears to have been pierced by crisis. As Thomas Markle lies in hospital after having his leg amputated below the knee following a life-threatening blood clot, his daughter has reached out.

After years of distance, it has taken the most brutal of turning points to force open a door that once seemed permanently sealed. For all the royal trappings that came to define Meghan’s life after marrying Prince Harry, the story of her estrangement from her father has always been a painfully ordinary one: pride colliding with hurt, mistakes hardening into resentment, and time turning misunderstandings into permanent scars.

What began as a bitter row around the time of the wedding became a frozen standoff neither side seemed able to thaw. Words were traded through column inches rather than across kitchen tables. Each year that passed made the gulf feel wider, colder, and more final.

READ MORE: Meghan Markle reaches out to dad Thomas as he fights for life after leg amputationREAD MORE: Prince Harry issued stark warning after mocking Donald Trump in TV sketch

Now fate has intervened in the starkest, most physical way.

Thomas Markle’s sudden collapse, the scramble to save his life, and the devastating decision to amputate his leg to prevent death have stripped everything back to raw human reality.

This is no longer about palace politics or tabloid disputes. It is about an 81-year-old man who could have lost his life and will now live permanently changed. It is about pain, vulnerability and fear.

Faced with that reality, Meghan did what many children would do when the unthinkable happens: she reached out to make contact. It is a moment heavy with emotion and symbolism.

Whatever misjudgements were made on both sides, this was once a devoted father who raised his daughter through reported long stretches of single parenthood, who encouraged her ambitions, and who believed fiercely in her long before the world knew her name.

This illness has exposed, in the harshest possible way, the cost of seven lost years. A wedding unattended. Grandchildren never met. A relationship reduced to public statements and silence.

Thomas now faces recovery with part of his body gone. Meghan faces the knowledge that reconciliation delayed too long can come at a terrible price. Whether this moment leads to true healing remains uncertain. Severe illness does not magically erase years of hurt or betrayal. Old wounds do not disappear overnight.

But crises have a way of stripping away pride and noise.

When life hangs in the balance, only what truly matters remains: family, forgiveness, time and the terrible truth that time is not guaranteed. Thomas Markle’s fight for life, and the permanent injury he now carries, may yet become the moment that finally breaks the cycle of silence.

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After seven years of estrangement, it is hope born of tragedy. Whether it becomes a new beginning or merely a momentary exchange in the shadow of loss is still unknown.

Who are favourites to win the 2026 World Cup?

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The draw for the 2026 World Cup has been made and that means the countdown to next year’s tournament in the United States, Canada and Mexico is on.

There are sure to be breakout performances, shocks, surprises, thrills and spills.

But who are the favourites according to the bookmakers, the form guide and the pundits?

The full line-up is not yet complete, with six places to be decided through play-offs in March.

But we’ve taken a look at who is in contention to lift the coveted trophy in New York come July.

Germany, Spain and Belgium have the three ‘easiest’ 2026 World Cup groups, according to the Fifa world rankings of the countries involved.

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Who are the in-form teams?

England qualified for the 2026 World Cup with a perfect record, winning all of their matches without conceding a goal.

Runners-up at the past two European Championships and World Cup quarter-finalists in Qatar three years ago, there is genuine hope that this will be the Three Lions’ year under new head coach Thomas Tuchel.

The bookmakers also fancy England to do well in the summer, with the majority putting them second favourites behind Spain.

European champions Spain were close to joining England with a perfect campaign, but a 2-2 draw against Turkey in their final qualifying match put the only small blemish on their record.

Spain were deserved winners at Euro 2024, beating England in the final, and in teenage Barcelona winger Lamine Yamal they have one of the best players in the world.

Except for a penalty shootout defeat in June’s Nations League final against Portugal, they have not lost a competitive game since facing Scotland in March 2023.

France, runners-up in Qatar in 2022, are also strong competitors for their final major tournament under Didier Deschamps and went unbeaten in European qualifying.

Opta’s super-computer places the three European sides as the favourites, with Spain given a 17% chance of victory, England 11.8%, and France 14.1%.

Germany, who lost their opening qualifier but won the next five on the spin to book their place, are also highly fancied by the bookmakers and data experts, while Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Croatia and Norway were also unbeaten in European qualifying.

Less impressive was Brazil’s qualifying campaign, as they finished fifth in the Conmebol table and lost six of 18 matches. That hasn’t stopped a lot of bookmakers placing them as fourth favourites, though, despite Opta putting them down in seventh.

Defending World Cup champions Argentina won the South American qualifying group by some way, finishing nine points above second-placed Ecuador.

Brazil are the only team to ever win back-to-back World Cups, in 1958 and 1962, but with Lionel Messi expected to feature, Argentina will be among the favourites for glory.

The standout side from the Asian qualifying rounds were Japan, who lost just one of their matches on the way to reaching next summer’s tournament.

Surprise semi-finalists in Qatar, Morocco won all eight of their African qualifying matches and could again pose a threat to the traditional big nations, while Egypt, Senegal, Ivory Coast and Tunisia were also unbeaten.

However, with Afcon beginning later this month, competing in two major tournaments in the space of six months could prove to be a tough task for the African nations.

But what about the conditions?

Hosting the World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico in peak summer time has sparked concerns over the extreme heat conditions teams could face.

This summer’s Club World Cup, held in the US, faced criticism because of the severe conditions, with Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernandez saying he felt “dizzy” while playing in “very dangerous” heat.

Research led by Queen’s University Belfast found temperatures at 14 of the 16 stadiums being used for the 2026 World Cup could exceed potentially dangerous levels during the tournament.

It is fair to say certain nations will cope better with the heat – some European nations could struggle and England have expressed a desire for later kick-off times to avoid peak temperatures.

Conditions are likely to favour South American nations while African teams could also benefit, although there has never been a World Cup winner from the continent.

Playing at home could also benefit the hosts, although the scattered venues and vast distances between stadiums mean it could also be tough for any side to settle at the tournament.

Ten of the 11 World Cups held in Europe have been won by European teams, but it is a completely different story when the tournament is played in the Americas.

Each of the seven tournaments hosted there had featured a South American winner until Germany broke the streak in 2014, and since then Argentina have won in the heat of Qatar.

Spain were the first European team to win the World Cup outside the continent, when they lifted the trophy in South Africa in 2010.

What do the pundits say?

Speaking about England’s group on BBC Radio 5 Live’s reaction show, former striker Dion Dublin said: “I always worry about Croatia. I just think they have so much experience, they have the quality to go with it as well.

“Ghana can pull out some incredible performances. They are a strong African nation who will make it incredibly difficult. ‘Concerned’ is the right word.”

European football journalist Julien Laurens said: “I know Spain lost the Nations League final to Portugal, but they’ve been really outstanding since Luis de la Fuente took over.

“The Euros was great – even if England pushed them well in the final, I think they were deserved winners.

“We [France] are relying on Mbappe, but I don’t think we have many weaknesses in this team.”

Speaking about Germany, Laurens added: “You just don’t know right now what kind of Germany you will see.

“They are still capable of being very good and Jamal Musiala will come back in January and we will see what kind of fitness he will have for the World Cup. And if Florian Wirtz is in top form, Musiala is in top form, with Nick Woltemade and Kai Havertz there’s something really interesting there attacking-wise.

“Defensively, I’m not sure really.”

South American football journalist Tim Vickery said: “Brazil are happy with their draw.

“New Jersey, Boston, Philadelphia, Miami, one in Atlanta – but that’s with air conditioning – and Carlo Ancelotti thinks their games are likely to be in the evening and I think they’re very happy about that.

“It’s all a bit of a rush because Ancelotti’s come in last minute. He has vastly improved the side, but what he’s trying to do is four up front.

“If Ancelotti can make that attacking talent fire, as he has done in some of the friendlies, then nobody will relish facing Brazil.”

Speaking about Argentina, Vickery said: “They are trying to do what has never been done before: nobody has ever retained the World Cup outside of their home continent.

“Things have gone extremely well for Argentina since they won the World Cup. They’ve won everything.

Full 2026 World Cup draw

Group A: Mexico, South Africa, South Korea, Winner of Uefa play-off D*

Group B: Canada, Winner of Uefa play-off A*, Qatar, Switzerland

Group C: Brazil, Morocco, Haiti, Scotland

Group D: USA, Paraguay, Australia, Winner of Uefa play-off C*

Group E: Germany, Curacao, Ivory Coast, Ecuador

Group F: Netherlands, Japan, Winner of Uefa play-off B*, Tunisia

Group G: Belgium, Egypt, Iran, New Zealand

Group H: Spain, Cape Verde, Saudi Arabia, Uruguay

Group I: France, Senegal, Winner of Fifa play-off 2*, Norway

Group J: Argentina, Algeria, Austria, Jordan

Group K: Portugal, Winner of Fifa play-off 1*, Uzbekistan, Colombia

Group L: England, Croatia, Ghana, Panama

*Uefa play-off A: Italy, Wales, Bosnia-Herzegovina or Northern Ireland

*Uefa play-off B: Ukraine, Poland, Albania or Sweden

*Uefa play-off C: Turkey, Slovakia, Kosovo or Romania

*Uefa play-off D: Denmark, Czech Republic, Republic of Ireland or North Macedonia

*Fifa play-off 1: DR Congo, Jamaica or New Caledonia

What information do we collect from this quiz?

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  • Football
  • FIFA World Cup

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