Archive March 5, 2026

GB wheelchair curlers beat Latvia for first Games win

Elizabeth Hudson

BBC Sport journalist

Great Britain defeated Latvia 6-5 to claim their first win in the wheelchair curling mixed doubles event at the Winter Paralympics in Milan-Cortina.

Having been beaten 10-7 by Estonia in Wednesday’s opening game before losing 14-3 in just seven ends to world number ones South Korea on Thursday morning, GB needed a better performance in their second match of the day.

And against the Latvians, who had also lost their first two matches, Jo Butterfield and Jason Kean rallied after their opponents stole one in the opening end.

Butterfield, who is aiming to become the first Briton to win Winter and Summer Paralympic golds – having finished first in the club throw event at Rio 2016 – played a key role with two superb shots either side of the break.

Her last stone of the fourth end enabled a score of two to take a 5-2 lead into the interval, while her final stone of the fifth end resulted in a steal for a 6-2 advantage.

“We enjoyed that one. It is great to get our first win and hopefully we can build some momentum from that,” said Butterfield.

“We played so much better. It was a performance, especially in the first half, that we know we can play. That’s the team we know we can be.

“We actually played better this morning than we did last night, although the scoreline didn’t reflect it. We have been building in every game we have played so far. Tonight we came out even better.”

The Britons had struggled against the Koreans in the earlier match, which fell away in the fourth end with Hyejin Baek and Yongsuk Lee 3-2 up in the match and scoring four with one stone each to play.

Butterfield missed a takeout attempt and Baek sent her final stone into the house to secure a score of five to put them 8-2 ahead.

GB opted to use the powerplay in the fifth end but once again South Korea controlled the end and were able to steal two to leave them 10-2 up and firmly in control.

Although GB pulled one back in the sixth end, the Koreans maintained their dominance with another strong seventh end to add another four and the match was brought to an early conclusion before the scheduled final end.

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US House of Representatives to vote on latest effort to halt Iran war

The United States House of Representatives is set to vote on a resolution to halt the administration of US President Donald Trump’s military actions against Iran, in the latest test of lawmakers’ positions on the war.

The vote on Thursday comes a day after a vote on a parallel war powers resolution, which failed in the US Senate 47-53, mostly along partisan lines.

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As in the Senate, Republicans control a slim majority in the House, and any vote to rein in Trump’s actions is all but assured to face an uphill battle.

Still, Thursday’s vote will be significant. The House of Representatives, with 435 seats, was envisioned by the US Constitution as the legislative branch closest to the US public. It is often referred to as the People’s House.

With polls continually showing dismal approval from Trump’s bombing campaign, and figures in Trump’s own “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) base questioning the war’s motivation, a vote will force lawmakers to go on record with their positions, according to Thomas Massie, a Republican sponsoring the resolution.

“They don’t want their name associated with this when it doesn’t turn out well,” Massie said from the House floor during a debate period on Wednesday.

He has joined with mostly Democrats in condemning Trump’s actions as unconstitutional.

Under the US Constitution, only Congress can declare war. Presidents can unilaterally conduct some military actions, but legal scholars have long argued that, under the founding US document, that authority only applies in instances of immediate self-defence of the country.

Lawmakers critical of Trump’s actions have decried the operation launched on Saturday alongside Israel as a “war of choice”, charging the administration has not offered any evidence of an immediate threat.

To be sure, the administration has presented a kaleidoscope of rationales, many that run counter to available evidence.

The administration has pointed to both Iran’s nuclear programme, which Trump has said was “obliterated” in strikes last year, as well as claims Iran sought to develop a ballistic missile programme capable of hitting the US. If Iran did seek to develop such a missile, experts have noted, US intelligence has assessed it would take them until 2035 to achieve that goal.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, meanwhile, said earlier this week that Washington’s close ally Israel was planning to strike Iran, which they expected to prompt an Iranian attack on US assets in the Middle East. Trump subsequently said Iran was the one planning to strike Israel.

Across the claims, the administration has said the totality of the Iranian government’s actions since the 1979 Islamic Revolution represented an immediate threat that previous US administrations had failed to address.

‘Constitutional right to exercise its authority’

Speaking ahead of the failed vote in the Senate on Friday, Democratic minority leader Chuck Schumer said following classified briefings and public statements, he increasingly feared the prospect of the US putting boots on the ground.

“He picks one plan one day, then he picks the total opposite the next. He doesn’t think it through, he doesn’t check the facts,” Schumer said, referring to Trump.

“He is surrounded by ‘yes’ men; this is dangerous,” he said.

As of Thursday, fighting continued across the Middle East, with the US and Israel repeatedly striking Iran, and Iran launching its latest wave of attacks across the Gulf. Recent strikes have extended as far as Turkiye and Azerbaijan.

At least 1,230 people have been killed in Iran since Saturday, while 11 were killed in Israel and nine in Gulf states. Six US soldiers were also killed.

As underscored in Wednesday’s Senate vote, Republicans have largely rallied behind Trump’s campaign or offered tacit support, including praise for the killing of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, the top Republican in the chamber, has warned it would be “dangerous” to force an end to the military campaign.

On Wednesday, he pointed to Congress’s “constitutional right to exercise its oversight authority”.

“But we also have a duty and obligation not to undercut our own national security,” he said.

Several Republicans have expressed confidence that Trump will swiftly end the war and, in turn, help reduce political fallout over contradictions with Trump’s anti-interventionist campaign pledges.

Under the 1973 War Powers Act, presidents have 60 days, with a possible 90-day extension, to obtain congressional approval to continue military actions, regardless of their initial justification.

Vote expected to be close

Republicans currently control 218 seats in the House to Democrats 214, with three seats remaining vacant.

The vote is expected to be close, with the top Democrat in the House, Hakeem Jeffries, predicting wide support across the party.

However, a handful of Democrats have indicated they could oppose the resolution, including Representative Josh Gottheimer, a top defender of Israel.

Beyond Massie, at least one Republican, Representative Warren Davidson, has committed to voting in favour of reining in Trump.

If the resolution passes with a simple majority, it would need to be brought to another vote in the Senate before it is sent to Trump’s desk. He could then veto it, and both chambers of Congress would need a two-thirds majority to override it.

A small group of Democrats has separately proposed a different war powers resolution that would allow the president to continue the war for 30 days before seeking congressional approval.

‘Brave and brilliant, Russell has compelling case as Scotland’s greatest’

Tom English

BBC Scotland’s chief sports writer

It’s spring 2015 and Finn Russell is 22 years old, a rookie with five caps to his name with just two of them away from home, one at the BBVA Compass Stadium in Houston, the other at BMO Field in Toronto.

Now he’s in Paris in his first Six Nations game. Houston and Toronto, it is not. Twenty-eight minutes gone at the Stade de France and Scotland are piling on the pressure in the home 22.

It’s 6-3 to Thierry Dusautoir’s side. Russell drops into the pocket, ready for an easy three in front of the posts. He lines up the drop-goal – and shanks it. The stadium empties derision on his head. Russell has arrived in Test match rugby.

On Saturday, he will play France for the 14th time – won four, lost nine. It will be his 93rd cap. All going well, he will make it a century come the autumn.

One of Scotland’s greatest players, unquestionably. The greatest ever, very possibly. The one who has thrilled fans more than any other? If it was put to a vote it would be a surprise if he didn’t top it.

Saturday is huge. Win an unlikely victory against an outrageously talented French side and Russell has, at last, a shot at winning the title in the final game, in Dublin. Lose, and it’s a chance gone.

Finn Russell plays against France in 2017SNS

Playing France? Well, it’s been an adventure since the start and even more so during, and after, his years with Racing, when his adopted nation came to marvel at his natural ability. No trophies with Racing, but a whole lot of memories – Russell doing Russell things.

In cataloguing Finn versus France, there are highs and lows. That shanked drop-goal as a relative kid, the injury that took him out of the game early a year later, made all the more painful because Scotland won.

The sumptuous moments in 2016 and 2018 when the Scots won back-to-back Tests at Murrayfield, the history made when winning in Paris in 2021 for the first time in 18 years, a day made complex because Russell was red-carded for a forearm to the neck of Brice Dulin and was off the field when Duhan van der Merwe struck gold at the death.

‘Everything he does is about winning and enjoying it’

So what do those who know him best say about him?

“Nothing ever flusters Finn,” says Scotland team-mate Kyle Steyn. “More than any player I’ve played with, he just has time on the ball. Something I’ve been really jealous of is his ability to flush something and be absolutely focused on the present. Whatever he’s done before, whatever he’s going to do next, that doesn’t affect the way he’s thinking now.”

Everybody says that about Russell. He never dwells on errors, he just kicks on. “Not many people shake it off like Finn does,” says Duncan Weir, the former 10 who won a Pro12 title with Russell in 2015.

Fraser Brown, who played alongside Russell for nine seasons with Glasgow and Scotland added: “His passing range, his speed of pass, his kicking short and long and now off the tee, some of it is natural but there are other elements he’s worked incredibly hard at.

“(The reality) dispels the lazy narrative that he’s just flash and carefree. ⁠He’s very intelligent. He has great vision but more than that, he has a very clear idea of what he’s looking for. He’s less off the cuff now.

Scotland Rugby Podcast: France ‘biggest test in world rugby’

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When Russell plays, the try count rises

Scotland's Finn Russell scores a try against FranceSNS

What was life like for Scotland pre-Russell, pre the outrageous skill with hand and boot, pre the vision and the execution, the confidence and the personality that gets you off your seat and, yes, the risk-taking that can make you hide behind it at times when it goes wrong?

Scotland’s attack was largely barren in the Six Nations from 2000 to 2015, when Russell turned up in earnest. In 16 consecutive seasons Scotland never made double figures in tries scored in a five-game championship.

They averaged fewer than six tries per tournament. Crossing the line was a Herculean task.

Then, Russell. In his second Six Nations, Scotland scored 11 tries, then 14, then 11, then 14 again. That number slumped to seven in 2000 – the year Russell and his coach, Gregor Townsend, were estranged. The following year, with Russell restored, the try count rose to 18. They average around 14.5 per Six Nations nowadays.

They have 10 in their first three games this time around. This is not all on Russell. He’s had Darcy Graham, Van der Merwe and Steyn out wide, he’s had Huw Jones and Sione Tuipulotu in the midfield. He’s had Blair Kinghorn at full-back and Ben White and George Horne at scrum-half.

Scotland international Finn RussellSNS

After the debacle in Rome, Scotland have come good. Two brutally hard games to go, but they’re in a healthy spot for now. Russell’s leadership behind the scenes post-Italy has been mentioned before. What he’s done on the pitch since then has been there for all to see.

His flick on to Jones for his first score against England, this his impromptu burst down the short side, his footwork and his chip ahead for the Ben White try. Just magical.

‘When he’s dialled in, it’s almost like time slows down’

Chris Paterson won 109 caps for Scotland and has studied Russell for the entirety of his career.

“Some players have a lot of knowledge but not a great understanding of what it means and how to apply it,” he says.

“What makes Finn different is that he likes to make out that it all comes easily to him. Don’t be fooled. He does the work. One of his best attributes is his bravery in trusting his instincts.”

Pete Horne is now one of Townsend’s assistants but back in the day he was Russell’s Glasgow and Scotland team-mate.

“As a player, I was always fully aware of how talented he was and knew that behind the scenes, even though it didn’t match the kind of young, cool and free image, there was a lot of hard work going on,” Horne explains. “He was on the laptops a lot.

“The conversations that he’d be having, you could tell he thought really deeply about the game. That’s the thing with really high-skilled players. When they’re absolutely dialled in, it’s almost like time slows down a little bit for them. They’re just in that flow state.”

Whether Russell can achieve such karma against the mighty France is a moot point, but if he does then Scotland must have a fighting chance. The day will need him at his gobsmacking best; poking and prodding, controlling and surprising, putting men into gaps and sticking points on the board.

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Trump to replace Homeland Security chief Kristi Noem with Markwayne Mullin

United States President Donald Trump has announced that he will replace Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem with Republican Senator Markwayne Mullin.

In a social media post on Thursday, Trump explained that he had reassigned Noem to be a special envoy for a new security initiative focused on the Western Hemisphere, dubbed the “Shield of the Americas”.

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The staffing change, he added, will take effect starting March 31. It marks the first major cabinet-level shake-up of Trump’s second term so far.

Trump praised Noem upon her departure from the cabinet-level post, writing that she “has served us well, and has had numerous and spectacular results (especially on the Border!)”

But Noem has played a prominent role in some of the administration’s most controversial immigration policies, and her tenure at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has spurred questions about government spending and conflicts of interest.

The announcement that she would be leaving her post comes a day after she faced a grilling from Democrats during congressional hearings this week, with several politicians called for her resignation.

“DHS is supposed to be protecting our residents and upholding constitutional protections. But you’ve turned that on the head. You have actually turned the United States government against its own residents,” Representative Pramila Jayapal, a Democrat, said during Wednesday’s hearing.

“Yours is a case of failed leadership. Secretary, you need to resign, be fired or be impeached because you don’t have the right to lead this agency.”

The announcement of Noem’s removal also comes as DHS continues to weather a partial government shutdown.

Democrats have opposed approving new funding for the department in response to deadly shootings involving immigration agents under Noem’s leadership.

Those shootings were brought up again this week during Noem’s appearances before judiciary committees in the Senate and House of Representatives.

Democratic Representative Jamie Raskin, for instance, repeatedly accused Noem of launching a “smear campaign” against two US citizens shot dead during interactions with immigration agents: Renee Good and Alex Pretti.

“There have been three homicides in Minneapolis in 2026, and your agents committed two of them,” Raskin told Noem.

He also highlighted comments Noem made calling Good and Pretti “domestic terrorists“, despite evidence undercutting the administration’s depiction of the events leading to their deaths.

“Rather than work with state and local authorities to solve these homicides, you barred Minnesota’s investigators from the crime scenes,” Raskin said.

“It smells like a coverup, and it makes me wonder who the real domestic terrorists are.”

Noem, formerly the Republican governor of South Dakota, has also been scrutinised for a $220m advertising campaign promoting border security.

The advertising campaign shows Noem riding a horse near Mount Rushmore, a well-known national memorial in her home state.

The news outlet ProPublica previously reported that a government contract for the campaign went to a Republican consulting firm with ties to senior DHS officials.

Noem has denied any wrongdoing, stating that the bidding process was “competitive” and that the contract was “all done correctly, all done legally”.

On Thursday, before announcing the staffing change, Trump denied any connection to the advertising campaign, telling the news service Reuters that he “never knew anything about it”.

Noem played a key role in the administration’s mass deportation push, and she has frequently used rhetoric that vilified immigrants as dangerous and violent.

Though DHS’s mandate focuses on domestic security, Noem has made several international trips over the last year, including visits to Ecuador in July and November.

Trump has called a “Shield of the Americas” summit at his Mar-a-Lago estate this weekend, inviting world leaders from multiple countries to discuss regional security and combatting Chinese influence in Latin America.

Noem’s replacement as DHS head, Mullin, has served as a US senator since 2023. He was a representative in the House for a decade before that, representing Oklahoma.

Trump highlighted his membership in the Cherokee Nation, writing that Mullin would be a “fantastic advocate for our incredible Tribal Communities” as DHS leader.

UFC champion Aspinall signs for Hearn’s new talent agency

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UFC heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall has signed for boxing promoter Eddie Hearn’s new talent agency.

The Englishman, 32, has been the standout performer in the UFC’s heavyweight division in recent years, with seven of his eight wins ending in the first round.

The move comes two weeks after boxer Conor Benn left Hearn’s promotional outfit Matchroom to join Dana White’s Zuffa Boxing.

Hearn has now launched a “Matchroom Talent Agency”, which will “nurture athletes’ careers by managing their brand and building their reputations”.

Aspinall’s deal, though, is a “commercial and advisory” one and not promotional as the Briton remains signed to the UFC.

“Eddie has built one of the biggest brands in sport and understands how to take athletes to the next level, both inside and outside of competition,” said Aspinall of the decision.

“I’m really looking forward to working together and exploring some exciting opportunities as I continue my journey back into the cage.”

Aspinall has been dealing with eye problems since his title fight with Ciryl Gane last October had to be stopped because of repeated eye pokes.

He had double eye surgery in February and it is unclear when he will be able to return to action.

Hearn, 46, has been publicly feuding with UFC president White since the launch of Zuffa Boxing.

Aspinall became part of that war of words when Hearn suggested White “humiliated” him by not backing the fighter after the eye controversy.

Aspinall is the first signing to Hearn’s agency.

“We believe in creating opportunities where others see obstacles,” said Hearn.

“At the heart of everything we’ve done as a business over the last 40 years is identifying ordinary people, who have extraordinary talent.

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Tom Aspinall signs a contract beside Eddie HearnMatchroom
Coral Barry

Combat Sports Senior Journalist

A key distinction in this deal is it is a “commercial and advisory” one and not promotional.

Aspinall is signed to the UFC, the world’s leading MMA promotion and they steer his career and have rights over his image and use of it.

This deal will be seen as a retaliatory strike at White after Zuffa Boxing poached Benn, a deal bankrolled by Saudi Arabia.

Hearn was publicly heartbroken and seething by Benn’s switch – and his decision to make Aspinall his marquee signing is a clear message to White and Zuffa Boxing that he is ready to fight back, both in boxing and MMA.

Aspinall’s relationship with the UFC, and especially White, has been strained as of late. The Briton expressed frustration with the business of the UFC after he felt he wasn’t fully backed following the eye-poke controversy in October that has threatened to derail his fighting career.

Aspinall’s father and coach Andy has also suggested his son will pursue a boxing career in the future, although his current UFC contract does not allow for him to fight in any other combat sport without their permission.

UFC fighters have managers and advisers who work independently from the UFC. One of the most famous of those is Francis Ngannou’s agent Marquel Martin, whose determined advocation for his fighter’s worth eventually saw the heavyweight leave the UFC as a reigning champion and earn millions in two boxing fights.

The worlds of boxing and UFC have collided with Zuffa’s arrival and the differences couldn’t be starker when it comes to fighter pay. Boxing offers big purses to fighters that aren’t elite level – Benn is getting a reported £11m to fight Regis Prograis in a relatively low-risk comeback contest in April.

The UFC do not offer those kind of purses to their world champions.

The question now is how much can Hearn actually achieve for Aspinall, given his talents are in the promotional side of fighting.

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Sri Lanka evacuates crew of second Iranian vessel after US sunk IRIS Dena

Sri Lanka has evacuated more than 200 crew members from a second Iranian naval vessel off its coast, a day after a US submarine sank an Iranian frigate in the same waters, leaving 87 sailors dead.

President Anura Kumara Dissanayake announced on Thursday that his navy would take custody of the second ship and move it to the northeastern port of Trincomalee for safekeeping, amid fears it could be targeted. He said his government held discussions with Iranian officials and the captain of the ship.

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Sri Lankan officials say 87 bodies were recovered and 32 people rescued from the roughly 180 people believed to have been on board IRIS Dena sunk on Wednesday.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday confirmed that a US submarine sank the vessel amid US-Israeli attacks on Iran.

Cabinet spokesperson Nalinda Jayatissa told parliament the vessel was positioned near Colombo, inside Sri Lanka’s exclusive economic zone but beyond its territorial waters, adding that authorities were doing “their utmost to safeguard lives”.

The developments came as Washington confirmed it had torpedoed the IRIS Dena, an Iranian frigate returning from a peacetime naval exercise hosted by India, marking the first time a US submarine has sunk an enemy warship by torpedo since the second world war.

Sri Lankan coastguards received a distress call from the IRIS Dena at 5:08am on Wednesday (23:28 GMT on Tuesday), with surviving crew describing an explosion. Rescue vessels arrived to find the frigate already gone, navy spokesperson Buddhika Sampath said, with only an oil slick and floating life rafts remaining at the scene.

Thirty-two survivors, all seriously injured, were taken to Galle National Hospital. Eighty-seven bodies were recovered from the sea, Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath said. More than 10 sailors remain missing.

The frigate, which was carrying about 180 crew, had been sailing home after participating in a major multinational naval exercise in the Bay of Bengal involving ships from 74 countries when it was struck roughly 44 nautical miles (81km) off Sri Lanka’s southern coast.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth confirmed the strike at a Pentagon briefing, releasing black-and-white footage of a Mark 48 torpedo hitting the frigate’s stern. “An American submarine sank an Iranian warship that thought it was safe in international waters,” he said. “Quiet death.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi called it “an atrocity at sea, 2,000 miles [3,219km] from Iran’s shores,” noting the ship had been a guest of India’s navy when struck without warning.

“The US will come to bitterly regret the precedent it has set,” he wrote on social media. He later fired back at Trump’s claim that the operation was running ahead of schedule, “Plan A for a clean rapid military victory failed, Mr President.”

The IRIS Dena was one of more than 20 Iranian navy vessels destroyed since the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran on February 28, targeting the country’s leadership, missile arsenals and nuclear infrastructure in an operation aimed at dislodging the current government.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed on the second day of the attacks, triggering protests in the country and beyond.

As of Tuesday, not a single Iranian warship remained under way in the the Gulf, the Strait of Hormuz or the Gulf of Oman, US Central Command chief Admiral Brad Cooper said.

Questions have also been raised about the legality of the attack in international waters.

The Israeli-US attacks have killed more than 1,000 people in Iran and displaced more than 100,000 from Tehran, according to the UN.

In a striking illustration of how far Washington’s war aims have stretched, Trump told Reuters on Thursday that the US intended to play a role in choosing Iran’s next supreme leader.

“We want to be involved in the process of choosing the person who is going to lead Iran into the future,” he said.

Sri Lanka, which has declared neutrality and called for “restraint and immediate de-escalation,” now finds itself hosting the human wreckage from a war being fought on its doorstep.