A coup that never was: Why UK’s Starmer faced major leadership challenge

United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer has emerged rattled but ultimately unscathed after a day and night of drama during which a key member of his Labour Party called for him to resign over revelations about a former ambassador to the US, Peter Mandelson, in the Jeffrey Epstein files.

Starmer has faced more than a week of mounting pressure since the release of the latest tranche of documents from the US Department of Justice relating to the criminal cases against the late sex offender. They revealed that Mandelson had maintained a close friendship with the disgraced financier even after Epstein had pleaded guilty to solicitation of sex with a minor and was jailed in 2008.

They include documents and emails that suggest Mandelson may have received payments from Epstein and passed sensitive information to him during the 2008-2009 financial crisis.

Since then, Starmer has admitted that he knew of the pair’s friendship when he appointed Mandelson as ambassador but said the peer had lied about the extent of it. The affair has caused outrage in parliament. Two key members of Starmer’s inner circle have resigned and a third is under pressure to go. On Monday, Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar called for the prime minister to do the same.

While Starmer’s position has been shored up for now by a rally of support from his cabinet on Monday night, just how badly has this affair shaken his government?

anas sarwar
‘The distraction needs to end,’ Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar says at a news conference in Glasgow on February 9, 2026, at which he called for Starmer to step down [Andy Buchanan/AFP]

Why did Anas Sarwar call for Starmer to resign?

Sarwar said at a news conference early on Monday afternoon that he had called Starmer and told him it was time for him to resign. “I spoke to the prime minister earlier today, and I think it’s safe to say he and I disagreed,” Sarwar said.

He said “too many mistakes” had been made in relation to the appointment of Mandelson.

“The distraction needs to end, and the leadership in Downing Street has to change,” Sarwar said as he became the first Labour heavyweight to stand against the prime minister.

While Sarwar said he believed Starmer to be a “decent man”, the fury over the Epstein files had severely damaged the government’s support and wrecked its chances in the upcoming Scottish parliament elections. Opinion polls put Scottish Labour some distance behind the Scottish National Party, followed by the far-right Reform party, led by Nigel Farage.

But cabinet members came out in support of Starmer, ultimately ending the coup that never was. Angela Rayner, former deputy prime minister and a senior member of the Labour Party, was the first to show him support. She said in a post on X that while she did not defend Starmer’s judgement, “the worst possible response [to the scandal] would be to play party politics or factional games.”

“I urge all my colleagues to come together, remember our values and put them into practice as a team,” she wrote on X. “The Prime Minister has my full support in leading us to that end.”

Within hours, nearly every minister had followed suit. Wes Streeting, the health secretary, urged people to “give Keir a chance”. Pat McFadden, the work and pensions secretary, said he hoped the prime minister would stay on, and Douglas Alexander, Scotland secretary, said he “respected” Sarwar’s stance but backed the prime minister.

On Monday night, Starmer addressed more than 400 MPs and peers at a Labour Party meeting. “I have won every fight I’ve ever been in. I fought to change the Labour Party to allow us to win an election again,” he told them.

“But I’ll tell you this, after having fought so hard for the chance to change our country, I’m not prepared to walk away from my mandate and my responsibility to my country or to plunge us into chaos as others have done.”

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Journalists gather outside 10 Downing Street, the official residence of Britain’s prime minister, on February 9, 2026, as Starmer was ‘getting on with the job of delivering change across the country’, a spokesman told them. [Henry Nicholls/AFP]

Who has resigned from Starmer’s team and why?

Two key figures have already resigned, and a third is under pressure to do so, UK media has reported.

Amid growing outrage over the new revelations about Mandelson and Epstein, Starmer’s chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, resigned on Sunday, taking “full responsibility” for advising the prime minister to appoint Mandelson to the ambassadorship, which he took up in 2025, despite the risks.

“The decision to appoint Mandelson was wrong,” McSweeney said. “He has damaged our party. … I advised the prime minister to make that appointment and I take full responsibility for that.”

Mandelson was dismissed from the post in September after serving seven months after the UK daily The Sun obtained other emails between him and Epstein that showed the depth of their friendship.

After the release of the latest tranche of Epstein documents on January 30, Mandelson resigned from the Labour Party and the House of Lords.

Tim Allan, Starmer’s communications chief, resigned on Monday, saying he was leaving to pave the way for a “new No 10 team” to be built as Starmer tries to reset his government.

Allan, who founded the Portland Communications firm specialising in reputation management, had been in the job for only five months, and Starmer is now looking to hire his fifth communications chief since taking office in 2024.

Chris Wormald, the cabinet secretary and senior-most civil servant in Downing Street, is also reportedly under pressure to resign and is said to be currently negotiating his exit from the role, which he has been in for less than a year.

The UK’s Guardian newspaper reported that some people close to Starmer view him as a “disastrous” appointment.

mandelson
UK Ambassador Peter Mandelson, shown standing just right of US President Donald Trump, seated, talks with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer by speaker phone in the Oval Office of the White House on May 8, 2025, in Washington, DC [Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images via AFP]

What did the Epstein files reveal about Mandelson?

The latest release of files showed Mandelson maintained his relationship with Epstein after the latter was jailed in 2008.

They also suggested Mandelson received payments from the late financier and may have shared market-sensitive information with him that was of financial interest to Epstein.

Leaks of sensitive information by Mandelson allegedly took place in 2009 while he was serving as the UK’s business secretary.

The UK police have launched a criminal investigation over suspected misconduct in public office linked to Mandelson’s relationship with Epstein.

In one of the emails revealed in the most recent tranche of documents released from the US Justice Department, Mandelson told Epstein to “fight for early release” shortly before he was sentenced in 2008.

“I think the world of you,” Mandelson told Epstein, adding about his prosecution: “I can still barely understand it. It just could not happen in Britain. You have to be incredibly resilient, fight for early release and be philosophical about it as much as you can.”

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Prime Minister Keir Starmer, right, talks with then-Ambassador to the US Peter Mandelson at a welcome reception at the ambassador’s residence in Washington, DC [File: Carl Court/pool/AFP]

How damaging has this all been for Starmer?

Starmer has apologised publicly for appointing Mandelson as ambassador to the US despite knowing of his ties – but not the extent of them, he said – to the disgraced financier.

“None of us knew the depth and the darkness of that relationship,” Starmer said on Thursday as he apologised to Epstein’s victims.

“I am sorry – sorry for what was done to you, sorry that so many people with power failed you, sorry for having believed Mandelson’s lies and appointing him.”

But this has not been enough to let him off the hook entirely, experts said.

Tim Bale, a professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London, said the scandal has been hugely damaging for Starmer. “A more popular PM might have been able to ride it out, but he was already facing a good deal of hostility from voters before it blew up,” Bale told Al Jazeera. “He’s managed so far to hold on to his cabinet, but he’s completely lost the trust of the electorate – and that’s hard to get back.”

Bale said “people are disgusted by” Starmer’s decision to appoint Mandelson “despite knowing that he’d stayed friends with Epstein after he’d been convicted”.

Britain's Foreign Secretary David Lammy and Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner
Then-UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy and Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner greet each other as they arrive for a cabinet meeting at Downing Street in London on September 2, 2025 [Toby Melville/Reuters]

Can Starmer’s leadership still be challenged?

While Starmer has survived Monday night, his position is still weak with low approval ratings, experts said.

Labour is expected to suffer losses in crucial Scottish elections in May. A parliamentary by-election is also due on February 26.

“The immediate danger [to Starmer] is that [Labour] suffers catastrophic losses in a by-election and then a big set of elections in May,” Bale said. “That will reignite calls for Starmer to resign and, if he doesn’t, a challenge from one or more of his colleagues.”

Among the top runners to replace Starmer are Rayner, his former deputy prime minister who resigned from the cabinet last year over a tax scandal.

A website pitching Rayner as leader, angelaforleader.co.uk, went live in January briefly, The Guardian newspaper reported. Rayner has denied any links to the website.

Another politician gearing up to replace Starmer is Wes Streeting, the health secretary.

Streeting, 43, has also been called out for his ties with Mandelson. In a bid to distance himself from the former ambassador, Streeting this week shared private chats he had with Mandelson that questioned the government’s growth plan.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood, 45, is another possible successor to Starmer. She has grown popular among several right-aligned leaders of the Labour Party with her moves to tighten border controls and crack down on unauthorised immigration.

epa12520210 British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer departs 10 Downing Street for Prime Minister's Questions at parliament in London, Britain, 12 November 2025. EPA/ANDY RAIN
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has survived calls for him to step down, but his approval ratings are low, and he remains vulnerable [File: Andy Rain/EPA]

What other issues has Labour faced under Starmer?

The Labour Party swept to power in July 2024, ending nearly 14 years of Conservative rule. However, the prime minister has since had a difficult time in Downing Street.

In the 2024 elections, Reform UK, the right-wing, populist, anti-immigration party led by Farage, won just five of the 650 seats in parliament. However, it has gone on to become one of the best polling British parties. In July, a YouGov poll put Reform in the lead, predicting it could win 271 seats if elections were held then.

In his speech on Monday, Starmer called the challenge posed by the rise of the Reform party, which has won over a number of high-profile defectors from the Conservative Party in recent weeks, “a fight for our lives”.

Starmer is also facing domestic pressure to put a stop to undocumented immigration to the UK. More than 32,000 people tried to cross the English Channel from France in small boats last year. These crossings are dangerous and have resulted in many deaths.

The UK and France have laid the blame on each other for the rising numbers. This led to a “one-in-one-out” migrant deal signed between the UK and France last year, under which the UK returns one migrant to France for each accepted refugee. The scheme has had little success, however, with only a handful of migrants returned.

Starmer himself has dropped in popularity by 20 percentage points from July 2024 to January this year, according to YouGov.

“Reform has obviously spooked some in the Labour Party,” Bale said, adding, however, that Reform is eating into the Conservatives’ base more. “And Labour probably needs to worry more about the Greens and the Liberal Democrats at this stage.”

Why did Pakistan end its India boycott at T20 World Cup?

After more than a week of deadlock, negotiations and meetings, Pakistan has agreed to end its boycott of the match against India at the T20 World Cup, bringing an end to one of the biggest crises in cricket’s history.

Barring the final, the India-Pakistan match is the biggest fixture at every cricket tournament, bringing in record-breaking viewing figures, enormous revenue and unmatched attention to the sport.

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Here’s how the T20 World Cup dispute started and ended:

How and when did the T20 World Cup crisis begin?

It all began when, on January 3, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) instructed the Kolkata Knight Riders to remove Bangladeshi fast bowler Mustafizur Rahman from their squad for the Indian Premier League (IPL).

The move came amid ongoing political tensions between India and Bangladesh, which the BCCI Secretary Devajit Saikia termed “recent developments which are going on all across”.

Why did Bangladesh refuse to play in India?

A day later, the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) announced that its team would not travel to India for the World Cup upon the advice of the interim Bangladeshi government, citing safety and security concerns for its players and staff.

It requested the International Cricket Council (ICC) to relocate Bangladesh’s fixtures – all of which were to be held in India – to tournament cohosts Sri Lanka.

Why did the ICC remove Bangladesh from the T20 World Cup?

The ICC and BCB were engaged in negotiations for more than two weeks, during which the game’s global governing body unsuccessfully tried to persuade Bangladesh to play their games in India.

When Bangladesh chose to stand firm on their stance, the ICC kicked Bangladesh out of the World Cup and replaced them with Scotland on January 24.

Why and when did Pakistan announce its boycott of the India game?

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) swiftly threw its weight behind Bangladesh, saying the ICC’s decision reeked of “double standards” as they had previously relocated India’s matches on the same grounds.

PCB’s Chairman Mohsin Naqvi said the board would decide the team’s fate at the World Cup after consultations with the government.

One week after Bangladesh’s expulsion, Pakistan’s government sent shockwaves through the cricketing world by saying its team would not take the field against India.

The move, Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced a few days later, was in solidarity with Bangladesh.

How did the ICC react to Pakistan’s boycott?

The ICC’s initial reaction was to warn Pakistan against carrying out its boycott, saying it could have a negative effect on cricket in the country.

However, when Pakistan refused to change its position, the ICC initiated a series of meetings and negotiations with PCB officials to persuade them otherwise.

PCB chief Naqvi hosted BCB Chairman Aminul Islam and top ICC officials on Sunday and reportedly put forth a series of demands, most of which involved Bangladesh.

Why did Pakistan agree to play against India?

The ICC, on Monday, said its dialogue with the PCB and BCB was “constructive and congenial” and agreed that Bangladesh would not face any penalties or sanctions for refusing to play in India.

It also promised an ICC event would be hosted in Bangladesh between 2028 and 2031.

Within an hour, Pakistan’s government said it had ordered the cricket team to take the field against India on February 15.

Why British coach is ‘game-changer’ for Super Bowl winners & NFL

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Ben Collins

BBC Sport journalist in San Francisco
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While most of the Seattle Seahawks’ staff charged on to the field at the end of Super Bowl 60, Aden Durde took a moment for himself.

He was congratulated by one colleague but then threw his headset on to a sideline bench at Levi’s Stadium, sat down and gazed skywards.

As fireworks and confetti filled the Santa Clara air, a smile spread across the Briton’s face as it dawned on Durde what he had achieved.

The 46-year-old from north London had just become the first overseas coach to win American football’s biggest prize.

It was a dream fulfilled, one that began with watching a video of the Chicago Bears team that won the Super Bowl in 1986.

Some 40 years on, now he too is a Super Bowl champion and is inspiring others outside the US to follow their NFL dreams.

“It feels amazing,” he told BBC Sport. “I’m still trying to process it.

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Durde’s role in ‘special journey’

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During five years as defensive co-ordinator of the London Warriors, Durde was able to earn coaching internships with the Dallas Cowboys and Atlanta Falcons, before the latter made him Britain’s first full-time NFL coach in 2018.

He progressed through roles with Atlanta and Dallas before Seattle’s new head coach Mike Macdonald made Durde his defensive co-ordinator in 2024.

‘AD’, as he is known at the Seahawks, has since helped create a defence he describes as “fast, physical, ball-hungry, and they work as a collective”.

“AD is an absolute game-changer for us,” said Macdonald on Monday. “It’s not just an incredible story that got him to this point, it’s him as a football mind, a football coach.

“He’s someone that has really brought us together, and the way that our defence plays inspired football is a great tribute to how AD operates, and what he brings to our football team and our organisation. I’m really happy for AD.

“He’s just an absolute beast and he’s so much fun to work with. He’s right there alongside, building this whole thing. It’s been a special journey.”

The Seahawks dominated the New England Patriots to win 29-13 on Sunday, but Durde has not just become a Super Bowl champion, he has helped forge a defence that will go down in NFL folklore.

Seattle’s defence has been dubbed ‘the Dark Side’ and produced a performance long-time NFL analyst Cris Collinsworth said was “as good as I have ever seen”.

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‘He’s constantly sending the elevator down’

As he finished speaking to reporters after Sunday’s game, with a British flag around his waist, Durde admitted he felt emotional.

“I’m trying to hold it back, I just want to get out of here,” he joked.

NFL analyst Phoebe Schecter used to coach with Durde on the NFL’s International Player Pathway programme and shared a moment with him on the field.

“As someone that’s known him for quite some time, [I know] he doesn’t like to be emotional, but he couldn’t help himself,” she said.

“The moment is so big, the achievement is so big, and he knows that he’s made history.”

Durde has spoken about being the best he can be, to make it easier for others to follow his lead, and Schecter is excited about what Durde’s story means for the international game.

“Aden’s great because he’s not just thinking about himself in the moment,” Schecter said.

“For years he’s been thinking about other people, building the NFL Academy and the International Player Pathway programme. He’s constantly sending that elevator back down.

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How NFL hopes to build on Durde’s success

While working with NFL UK, Durde shared an office with two-time Super Bowl winner Osi Umenyiora and they founded the IPP programme.

“I remember Osi telling me about [Durde] back in the day and then followed his journey,” said NFL executive Peter O’Reilly.

“How talented he is and how well respected he is by his players, and what a great person he is, that just makes him someone you want to root for.”

The IPP helped Britain’s Efe Obada and Australia’s Jordan Mailata get into the NFL, and former rugby league player Mailata won a Super Bowl last year with the Philadelphia Eagles.

“Whether it’s coaching or playing, having those role models, those local heroes, where someone in the UK can look up and say ‘OK, there’s a path for me’, is really important – like last year for a young Australian looking at Jordan Mailata,” O’Reilly added.

“The IPP is also a great breeding ground for international coaches. You want that mix of coaches, and we’ve been in engaged in how we build that pipeline, making sure programmes for coaching development are not just US-based but global.”

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Is Durde destined to become head coach?

Once Durde joined Seattle’s on-field celebrations at Levi’s Stadium, he was joined by his wife Kate and their two sons.

Their eldest son, Kane Doyle-Durde, now works as a scout for the Dallas Cowboys and their youngest Dylan is working in coaching.

“We just hugged, we were grateful for the moment,” said Durde.

“A lot of people have sacrificed a lot for me to be sitting here, but you don’t see all the people around me that helped me get here. I’m very grateful for them.”

They include many back in the UK, who Durde aims to catch up with now the NFL season is over.

“I’ve got to get back to London, get this mayhem out of the way,” he laughed. “I need to go home.”

In particular, Durde is looking forward to seeing his close friend Marvin Allen, one of a few Britons to own a Super Bowl ring having been on the Pittsburgh Steelers’ practice squad when they became NFL champions in 2009.

Durde had two interviews for head-coach positions during the current hiring cycle and – although he is set to remain with Seattle next season – Allen is confident he will become the NFL’s first overseas head coach.

“Aden has come from obscurity to take an American sport by storm,” he said.

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The messy Quad God and kitchen blender set to be an Olympic superstar

Emma Smith

BBC Sport journalist at Milano Ice Skating Arena
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After sending the Milan-Cortina crowd into a frenzy with his back flip in the figure skating team event, all eyes will be on US skater Ilia Malinin as he strives for individual Winter Olympic gold.

He made mistakes in the team event but was still the only participant to record more than 200 points, securing USA team gold by a single point ahead of Japan on Sunday.

That sums up the 21-year-old, the biggest star of his sport, who is set for global fame at Milan-Cortina 2026.

“It’s his Olympics to lose,” Olympic figure skating gold medallist Robin Cousins told BBC Sport. “After watching him over the last five years – he has grown. The talent was always there; he is otherworldly in that respect.

“Is it messy? Yes, but I watched him live and I got it. Now he has grown into that slightly quirky style – it isn’t polished, and I don’t want it to be.

“Anyone lucky enough to be in Milan, it will be one of those ‘I was there’ moments.”

Malinin has not been beaten in competition for almost two and a half years. Competing in his first Olympics, he arrives with the nickname ‘Quad God’ having become the only skater to successfully land the quadruple axel.

The move requires a skater to launch themselves into a jump, spin four and a half times in the air, and cleanly land backwards.

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‘I want to pace myself’

Ilia Malinin, Alysa Liu and Amber GlennGetty Images

He made up for it by landing the first legal backflip at an Olympic Games since US champion Terry Kubicka in 1976 – after which it was banned for safety reasons.

Thanks in part to skaters like France’s Surya Bonaly – who performed the move illegally but successfully at Nagano 1998 – the backflip is now legal again; and Malinin became the first to land it at the Games on only one foot.

So Malinin is already making history and winning golds, and he isn’t even at his best yet.

He was due to only perform in the short program in the team event, but with USA’s Olympic title from Beijing 2022 under threat by Japan, he agreed to perform in the free skate too.

“It was just such an honour, all my team-mates we have this passion for figure skating,” he told the BBC after winning team gold. “And for many of us, this was just the start.

“I didn’t want to go full capacity. I want to pace myself correctly going up to the individuals.”

It is in the free skate where Malinin dominates. Japan’s Yuma Kagiyama outshone Malinin in the team short program, just as he did in December’s Grand Prix Final.

At the Grand Prix Final, Malinin was third after the short but still finished 30 points clear of the field after the free skate.

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Why is Malinin like a kitchen blender?

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Blessed with natural athleticism, Malinin has also been incubated in the perfect training environment.

Born in Virginia to immigrants from Uzbekistan, both of his parents – Tatiana Malinina and Roman Skorniakov – represented their home nation in Olympic figure skating.

Malinin has the masculine version of his mother’s maiden name as his parents were worried Skorniakov would be too difficult for Americans to pronounce – and his maternal grandfather, Valery Malinin, is a figure skating coach in Russia.

This environment has produced perhaps the physical ideal of the male figure skater. When broken down into scientific numbers, Malinin’s ability becomes truly astonishing.

Take a triple axel. Analysis at the most recent World Championships showed that the average skater, when successfully performing the element, leapt a distance of 2.77m and reached a height of nearly 60cm.

In contrast, Malinin’s quadruple axel sends him only 2.38m in distance – but to a height of 90cm, similar to the standing jump of an NBA player.

To perform the axel jump, a skater – travelling at about 15 miles per hour – swings their shoulders to snap into the spin, drawing their arms and legs inwards to reduce resistance.

In order to successfully perform four and a half spins, Malinin must rotate at about 350 revolutions per minute – a similar rate to the average kitchen blender.

And then he has to land it, with huge amounts of force going through one leg while maintaining perfect form with the other, and the rest of his body.

Most sports lessen the shock of landing with soft shoes or surfaces; Malinin is landing on ice on a metal blade – all while stopping the rotational force. And while not getting dizzy.

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IOC bans Ukrainian racer’s ‘helmet of remembrance’

Bobbie Jackson

BBC Sport journalist

Ukrainian skeleton racer Vladyslav Heraskevych has been banned from wearing a helmet featuring images of people killed during the Russian invasion of his home country at the Winter Olympics.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) said the helmet broke the rules laid down in the Olympic Charter, but he will be allowed to wear a black armband in remembrance of those who have lost their lives.

Heraskevych, who wore the helmet during a training session in Cortina, said the decision “breaks my heart”.

The 26-year-old told Reuters many of those pictured on his ‘helmet of remembrance’ were athletes, including teenage weightlifter Alina Peregudova, boxer Pavlo Ishchenko and ice hockey player Oleksiy Loginov, and some of them were his friends.

Rule 50.2 of the Olympic Charter states “no kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas”.

“We have addressed from the beginning the issue, the IOC fully understands the desire of athletes to remember those who have lost their lives in that conflict and other conflicts around the world,” IOC spokesman Mark Adams said.

“We have to focus on athlete performance and sport, and it is fundamental there are equal rights for all athletes, and keep it free from all interference.

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Heraskevych has said he will respect Olympic rules while still raising awareness about the war in Ukraine at the Games.

“We have over 90 countries competing here, thousands of athletes, there are a range of things people want to commemorate,” Adams added.

“We want in the Olympics a safe space to compete away from that, while allowing them to express themselves.

“He can wear an armband with no text. However much we agree with an expression, we have to keep a fine balance.”

Adams said people will always “push rules to their limit” and the IOC will assess each case on an individual basis.

“Our rule is that we have to protect the field of play, it is difficult and there will be people who try to game the system, that’s where we have to ban slogans,” Adams said.

“Where there is good reason, black armbands will also be allowed for other athletes.”

He said Toshio Tsurunaga, the IOC representative in charge of communications between athletes, national Olympic committees and the IOC, had been to the athletes’ village to tell him.

“The IOC has banned the use of my helmet at official training sessions and competitions,” Heraskevych, who was a Ukraine flagbearer in Friday’s opening ceremony, said on Instagram on Monday.

“A decision that simply breaks my heart. The feeling that the IOC is betraying those athletes who were part of the Olympic movement, not allowing them to be honoured on the sports arena where these athletes will never be able to step again.

“Despite precedents in modern times and in the past when the IOC allowed such tributes, this time they decided to set special rules just for Ukraine.”

Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky thanked Heraskevych “for reminding the world of the price of our struggle” in a post on X.

Heraskevych, Ukraine’s first skeleton athlete, held up a ‘No War in Ukraine’ sign at the 2022 Beijing Olympics, days before Russia’s invasion of the country.

Following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 athletes from Russia and Belarus were largely banned from international sport, but there has since been a gradual return to competition, although not under their national flags.

‘We love our country’ – Ruohonen

Richard Ruohonen smiles and is wearing a black baseball caps with a two-toned blue striped t-shirtGetty Images

Elsewhere, American curler Richard Ruohonen has spoken out about the USA’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Protests have taken place across the US over the past few weeks after intensive care nurse Alex Pretti, 37, and fellow American citizen Renee Good, 37, were both killed by ICE agents in Minnesota in January.

“What’s happening in Minnesota is wrong,” Ruohonen said.

“There’s no shades of grey – it’s clear. I really love what’s been happening there now, with people coming out, showing the love, the compassion, integrity and respect for others that they don’t know and helping them out. We love Minnesota for that.

“I’m proud to be here to represent Team USA and to represent our country, but we’d be remiss if we didn’t at least mention what’s going on in Minnesota, and what a tough time it’s been for everybody.”

On Monday, Team GB skier Gus Kenworthy, who was born in England but grew up in America, said he had received death threats after posting a graphic image relating to ICE on Instagram.

American skiers Chris Lillis and Hunter Hess voiced their concerns about the actions of ICE and ongoing tensions in the US.

President Donald Trump later criticised the American duo and called Hess a “real loser” and said he shouldn’t have “tried out for the team”.

“I want to make it clear that we are out here, we love our country,” Ruohonen said.

“We’re playing for the US, we’re playing for Team USA, we’re playing for each other, and we’re playing for our family and our friends that sacrificed so much to get here today.

“What the Olympics means is excellence, respect, friendship, and we all, I think, exemplify that.

    • 15 hours ago

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Toughest season I’ve had as manager ‘by a mile’ – Slot

Aadam Patel

Liverpool reporter
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Liverpool boss Arne Slot says this season is the toughest he has had as a manager “by a mile” and his side are “not performing to Liverpool‘s standards”.

Defeat by Manchester City on Sunday leaves the Premier League champions sixth in the table – four points behind fifth-placed Chelsea.

Liverpool are level on points with seventh-placed Brentford and would have dropped below the Bees on goal difference had Rayan Cherki’s late third goal for City not been disallowed.

Slot replaced Jurgen Klopp as Reds boss in June 2024 and led the club to a record-equalling 20th top-flight title in his first season in charge.

However, they have struggled this term despite spending almost £450m on new signings in the summer, including a British record £125m for Alexander Isak.

Liverpool have won 11, drawn six and lost eight games in the league so far in 2025-26.

Asked by BBC Sport whether this was the toughest season he has had, Slot said: “By a mile. All the other seasons I have managed, there was only positives.

“I don’t think I have ever lost two games in a row [until now]. It’s an exception for me, I am not used to it.

“I don’t think we feel we’ve only lost two of our last 17. A draw feels like a loss.

The likelihood is five Premier League teams, rather than the usual four, will qualify for next season’s Champions League.

Last month, Slot said Liverpool would have an acceptable season if they “improve in one box” – but could have a special campaign if they “improve in both boxes”.

However, on Tuesday the Dutchman suggested his side will have to be “close to perfection” to secure Champions League football next season – and he is aware of the impact of missing out.

“If we don’t have Champions League football [next season], it’s definitely not been an acceptable season,” former Feyenoord boss Slot added.

“When I arrived here and only signed Federico Chiesa, it was after a Europa League season.

“That does have an enormous impact on the way this club is run. I am completely aware of that.”

Liverpool travel to face Sunderland – who are unbeaten at home – on Wednesday at 20:15 GMT.

Slot may be struggling for right-back options at the Stadium of Light, with Dominik Szoboszlai – who has been filling in at full-back – suspended after his late red card against Manchester City.

Conor Bradley is out for the rest of the season, Jeremie Frimpong has not featured since injuring his groin against Qarabag and Joe Gomez has been out with a knock.

Striker Isak and centre-half Giovanni Leoni are also long-term absentees.

“It’s different to lead the team after a loss or multiple losses and draws than a win but I don’t think anybody in this building thinks I’ve completely changed,” Slot added.

Honesty & belief on show from defiant Slot – analysis

This was a news conference where Slot mentioned the “setbacks”, “hits” and “bad luck” his side have faced this season.

There have been plenty of reasons, from long-term absentees to late goals to the time it has taken their new signings to adapt to life in the Premier League.

“Even if we sign a player [Jeremy Jacquet]) and he’s not even playing for us he gets injured,” Slot said, after Jacquet, who will join Liverpool for £60m in the summer, sustained a shoulder injury at the weekend while playing for Rennes.

Yet Slot stressed Liverpool’s focus must remain on improving their performances, even if at times it feels like he has “tried many different things”.

“The question is are we unlucky or is it part of who we are? That is something we can only find out in the upcoming three to four months,” Slot said.

It did not feel as if he was making excuses – rather, Slot was refreshingly honest about the range of challenges his side have faced and admitting their flaws.

There was a little smile when he admitted this is the toughest season he has had in his career. Within that, a glimpse too into how challenging everything has been for him at one of the biggest clubs in the world.

Defeat at Sunderland on Wednesday will only amplify the pressure on the Dutchman. Like he said, it would not be acceptable for Liverpool to miss out on the Champions League.

But there was a sense of defiance and belief too within Slot, who still believes Liverpool can do “special” things this season.

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