Strictly’s Ellie Goldstein shares truth behind ‘tears’ after major fan concern

Fans of Strictly Come Dancing have been comforted by Ellie Goldstein, who insisted that because of the BBC show, she is more confident than ever.

Strictly Come Dancing star Ellie Goldstein has reassured fans that her “teary” moment during Saturday night’s first live show was not a sign of distress, but simply a reaction after a long day of rehearsals.

The model, actress, and author, 23, drew concern from viewers when she was supported on stage by professional dancers Dianne Buswell, Karen Hauer, and fellow contestant Harry Aikines-Aryeetey. This came despite her Cha Cha with partner Vito Coppola being warmly received by the judges.

Ellie addressed the speculation in an Instagram post on Sunday, sharing her excitement about performing on the BBC One show.

She wrote, “Thank you all so much for the incredible love and support! ” along with a photo of herself wearing a metallic tasseled dress. I’m thrilled that so many of you watched my dance last night because I’m truly having the time of my life. This is truly a true dream.

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She praised the team’s continued support. My wonderful family, my agents, the entire Strictly crew, and of course my incredible dance partner Vito make up the most amazing support team. She said, “I couldn’t have asked for better.”

Ellie clarified any confusion by explaining why her eyes appeared watery during the live performance.

“Just a little note: sometimes my eyes get watery after a long day – I promise I’m not upset! I’m doing so well and feeling SO happy, and your concern truly means the world,” she wrote.

Ellie continued, “Dancing on this stage makes me feel strong, sasy, confident, and completely myself,” while highlighting her self-assurance and self-identity. Every minute is perfect for me!

“And one more thing: I do have Down syndrome, but that doesn’t define me. Not even close. Ellie continued, “It’s actually the least interesting aspect of me.”

Ellie became the first model to feature in a Gucci campaign in 2020, earning her first international recognition. She has worked for major brands like Superdrug, Nike, Vodafone, and Primark over the past ten years.

During Saturday’s live show, Ellie and Vito performed the Cha Cha to Ariana Grande ’s Yes, And?, impressing the judges.

Anton Du Beke called her “a joy,” while Craig Revel Horwood described the routine as “flat footed” but praised her “natural rhythm.” Meanwhile, Shirley Ballas awarded Ellie a fan labeled ‘fabulous.’

Craig, Motsi Mabuse, and Shirley each received four points for their energetic performances, with Anton giving the pair five, totaling 17 points.

Ellie’s appearance has been celebrated as a milestone for representation on Strictly Come Dancing and many fans are hoping she makes it all the way to the final this year.

Strictly airs on BBC One and iPlayer on Saturdays at 7 p.m.

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Will NFL return to Dublin? Rodgers ‘100%’ thinks so

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The NFL circus had already packed its tent and left the city on Sunday, and speculations soon surfaced about whether the sporting event would make a comeback.

In their first regular-season game played in Ireland, the Pittsburgh Steelers rallied to defeat a fourth-quarter comeback attempt by the Minnesota Vikings, 24-21.

No Vikings fan would have forgotten in a hurry if Kevin O’Connell’s men had come from a 24-6 deficit with 11 minutes and 21 seconds left.

But the 74, 512 people in attendance already felt a moment to remember before they were turned over on downs to end the game.

The Steelers organization saw the completion of a long-awaited dream.

What it all would have meant for the side’s late owner, Dan M. Rooney, whose ancestors were from County Down, was a constant theme throughout the week when they defeated the Chicago Bears in a pre-season game.

It’s still to be seen whether Sunday’s game marked the start of a regular rotation in the International Series rotation or the fitting tribute to one of the NFL’s founding families.

Following on from Frankfurt, Munich, and London, Dublin became the fourth city in Europe to hold a similar event. Next month, Madrid and Berlin will also be on the list.

Brazil and Mexico have both hosted games, and Australia will host one next year. Asia might follow it up.

What was once America’s game is now undoubtedly global in scope, but with such host competition, can the Emerald Isle anticipate a quick return?

One well-known supporter is undoubtedly in their area.

When asked if Dublin deserved more games in the future, Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers responded, “100%,” when asked by BBC Sport NI.

“The entire experience was fantastic. Thank you to everyone who contributed to this happening and the nation. I would have said the same thing regardless of whether it had happened.

Since 2007 when international games have been on the NFL calendar, it is only natural to assume that some players now find them to be just another game.

However, former Irish national defensive tackle Cameron Heyward showed that Croke Park’s significance in Irish culture was well known, blaming the Rooney family for making the GAA’s headquarters “sacred ground” for many.

Following that, acknowledging that Hill 16 had been converted into a seated area for the occasion only strengthened his sense of both time and place.

The NFL discussed creating a “mini-Super Bowl” in Dublin when it was announced in May that the Vikings would face the Steelers, a phrase that was repeated throughout the city throughout the week.

Dublin is an inch and a half of a European capital, but it lacks such scale where such events are lost in the sprawl. NFL jerseys were present throughout the game’s opening walk, which was accompanied by a stadium covered in black and gold that was decked out in the city center.

It felt like a Steelers home game in practice, too. As is customary in Pennsylvania, Styx’s Renegade blared and the renowned “Terrible Towels” twirled. Even a hotel across the stadium provided Primanti Bros’ sandwiches.

There was a large audience, and it was obvious that they were interested in soaking up every moment.

According to Rodgers, “In most NFL stadiums, the crowd starts to trickle in after two hours when the stadium opens.”

Somebody left the locker room at around 11:00 and says, “Man, there’s a lot of people out there already.”

Steelers fans wave their 'Terrible Towels'Inpho

The occasion had some teething issues. When quarterback Carson Wentz was unable to see a play clock and All-Pro wide receiver Justin Jefferson lost his balance as he appeared to be heading for the end zone, the Vikings appeared to have received a significant delay-of-game penalty.

Not as enthusiastic about the event as local gridiron fans were.

The GAA’s sponsorship of sports outside of Croke Park has frequently been a contentious issue.

In recent years, that stance has cooled, but in the weeks leading up to Sunday, such traditions as the money needed from the government to secure the game and the government’s objections to foreign policy were mentioned in media articles as justifications for some who would rather the NFL had not seen the red carpet roll out.

No complaints about our three days together.

When or if the NFL returns to Dublin, it will have to weigh both the good and bad.

Henry Hodgson, the general manager of NFL UK, stated to BBC Sport NI: “We wanted to see how this went, see how this week went, see how the game went, and then we’re going to evaluate.”

We’ll work with our partners in Irish government and Dublin City Council to assess how things turned out, and we’ll watch and see what develops in the future.

The only drawback, at least for Rodgers, was not having more time in the country.

He said, “No complaints about the three days we spent.” Only desire exists for more time spent with you outstanding Irish people. That is it.

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Namibia deploys army to fight fire in one of Africa’s largest reserves

In a social media post, Prime Minister Tjitunga Ngurare Manongo announced that Namibia had sent more than 500 soldiers to fight the massive fire that has destroyed a third of the world’s largest wildlife reserve, Etosha National Park.

Starting on Sunday, Manongo promised to assist firefighters, police, and volunteer firefighters who are already battling the “raging fire.”

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A major tourist draw, the park in the north of the largely deserted country, is home to 114 different species of mammals, including the critically endangered black rhinoceros.

According to Namibia’s Ministry of Environment, Forestry, and Tourism, the fire started on September 22 and quickly spread due to strong winds and dry vegetation, causing significant ecological damage.

The ministry has closed some tourist destinations and advised people to be cautious because the wind direction could change unexpectedly.

The government also sent two helicopters to the area on Sunday to assist with firefighting efforts following an emergency cabinet meeting on Saturday, according to a statement from the president.

The reinforcements reportedly accompanied 40 soldiers who had already been fighting the blaze on Saturday, along with police, residents, and people from nearby farms and private enterprises.

Defence Minister Frans Kapofi told the AFP news agency that the extra troops “are deployed from various regions and will be deployed in all affected areas.”

The presidency stated that “unknown number of wildlife had been killed, while thankfully no human casualties had been reported,” adding that the fire had spread to some neighborhood.

The fire “presents a significant threat to the communities’ biodiversity, wildlife, and livelihood.” The fire destroyed a further 30% of the park’s grazing, according to the statement, adding that it was still trying to figure out what started the blaze.

The fire, which is thought to have been the result of charcoal-producing activities on commercial farms close to the park, was reported on Saturday by the Environment Ministry.

According to the statement, “The ecological damage inside ENP is extensive, with an estimated 775, 163 hectares [1.9 million acres] burned, about 34 percent of the park.

According to the presidency, information gathered by ground-based teams indicated that the fire was still under control on Sunday in some areas but that it was still spreading to the Omusati region, which is close to the country’s border with Angola.

The ancient Etosha salt pan, which is about 130 kilometers (81 miles) long and 50 kilometers (31 miles) wide and attracts large numbers of migratory flamingoes during the rainy season, serves as its main attraction. It covers a total of 22 square kilometers (8,600 square miles) and is located in the park.

Last week, Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah, president of Namibia, stated to the UN General Assembly that “climate change is drying up our rivers and scorching our lands.”

She also urged governments to support the UN Convention’s stronger support for the Namib Declaration.

Namibia, one of the dozens of nations that argued at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) last year, argued that the two are inextricably linked, with Namibia’s submission focusing notably on the right to have access to water.

The world’s highest court ruled in July that nations must abide by international law and that failing to do so could lead to future legal battles between the countries.

The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) recently discovered that wildfires are increasingly causing poor air quality because of climate change, which causes more and more fires and smoke to travel far distances to other nations and even continents.

Mourinho wants to show Chelsea ‘I am here’ on return

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The dressing room was in shock.

Some Chelsea players were in tears and others hid their faces as Jose Mourinho went to each of them to say his goodbyes.

Eighteen years have passed since Mourinho’s first spell at the club ended, but that “sad day” at the training ground stuck with Salomon Kalou.

“It was not just a manager we were losing,” said Kalou, who played for Chelsea from 2006-2012. “It was a great person, a mentor, someone who was willing to help you and fight for you.

“The reason why he’s the ‘Special One’ is because he affects people. He brings something very special to a club.”

Not everyone has such fond memories of Mourinho, of course, from his subsequent second coming at Chelsea or, indeed, some of the clubs he has managed since.

Yet Benfica will hope the aura returns on the biggest stage of all – the Champions League – as Mourinho brings his new side back to Stamford Bridge on Tuesday.

And the 62-year-old won’t just be content with taking a seat at Europe’s top table again, as close friend Jose Peseiro explained.

An unexpected opportunity

Such a prospect felt a long way off when Mourinho was sacked by Fenerbahce last month.

But an unexpected opportunity arrived sooner than even Mourinho could have imagined – from the club that eliminated his former side in the Champions League qualifiers.

Mourinho was in Barcelona with his wife Matilde when the call came from Benfica president Rui Costa.

“Is it worth talking?” Costa asked him, after dismissing Bruno Lage following Benfica’s shock defeat by Qarabag.

It showed the tricky situation Costa was in before next month’s presidential elections.

But Mourinho was receptive.

In fact, Costa later claimed – in an interview with TVI – he had agreed a two-year deal worth about 3m euros (£2.6m) net initially, rising to 4m euros (£3.5m) next season. That is a fraction of what he earned at his peak.

The contract includes a break clause that will enable either party to terminate the deal 10 days after the final game of the season if they wish.

Twenty-five years on from his first brief spell at Benfica, which started with one president and ended with another, Mourinho was willing to walk into the eye of another political storm in Lisbon.

But this is a different Mourinho, compared to the relative novice who had never previously managed a club in 2000.

Few know that better than Jose Morais – his assistant at Chelsea, Real Madrid and Inter Milan.

“Jose brings more than experience, ambition and a winning mentality,” he said. “He brings the ability to shape a team into something greater than the sum of its parts.

“When he first came to Benfica, nobody really knew what he was capable of and, yet, he lit a fire.”

Mourinho went on to win 26 major trophies at Porto, Chelsea, Real Madrid, Inter Milan, Manchester United and Roma.

But it is a decade since he lifted a league title. It has been over five years since he took charge of a match in the Champions League proper. And he is coming off the back of a bruising spell at Fenerbahce.

Still brutally honest

The hair is whiter now.

Mourinho has portrayed himself as “more altruistic” and “less egocentric”, which will no doubt amuse those who have followed his career.

The Benfica manager has even insisted he has not returned to his homeland to “wage war” after reaching out to Porto president Andre Villas-Boas – his former colleague – and Sporting president Frederico Varandas.

Yet the obsession remains.

“Others accept defeat, but he fights that,” Peseiro said. “Even now, he doesn’t accept losing. He lives for football.

“Normally, when you age, you understand. ‘I lose, no problem, it’s life’ – but he’s still the same. He has less friends than others because the focus is football, football, football. He’s a passionate guy. He doesn’t like to lose. He wants to win.”

It won’t come as a surprise, then, that in his first week at Benfica, Mourinho took aim at the video assistant referee.

He also spoke directly to referee Sergio Guelho at half-time to ask why he had not booked Rio Ave goalkeeper Cezary Miszta for slowing the game down during a 1-1 draw.

And he’s not exactly been shy in critiquing his own side in public, claiming they were “naive” after conceding a late equaliser.

Sound familiar?

Kalou was 20 when he joined Chelsea and walked into a heavyweight dressing room fresh from winning back-to-back Premier League titles under Mourinho.

The Ivorian quickly realised his new manager was a straight talker.

“What I liked about him the most was his honesty,” he said. “He will never sugar-coat anything. As a player, I respected that.”

Kalou felt the full force of Mourinho’s sharp tongue even after the Portuguese left.

After watching Kalou score against his Inter Milan side, in 2010, Mourinho knocked on the Chelsea team bus post-match and asked his former player to come outside.

“When you were with me, you didn’t score like this,” he told him. “Be careful!”

Football has changed, of course.

But Mourinho made it clear to his Benfica players following his appointment that he would be “very direct”.

‘Jose’s fire has not dimmed’

A fluke of the fixture calendar means Mourinho is already preparing to take his Benfica squad to Stamford Bridge.

And history tells us it’s rarely dull when he is in the opposition dugout.

Mourinho declared “Judas was number one” after Chelsea fans turned on him during his time at Manchester United.

Another time, the Portuguese – whose family home is not far from the stadium – held up three fingers to signify the number of titles he won at the club.

He even went on to take the Spurs job in 2019, having once claimed he could not do so because he “loved Chelsea supporters too much”.

Perhaps, then, it is not a surprise you won’t find a photograph of Chelsea’s most successful manager on the legends wall outside Stamford Bridge, and his trademark Armani overcoat is not as prominent in the club’s museum as it once was.

But his contribution has not been forgotten.

Season ticket holder Tim Rolls has even predicted Mourinho will get a “very positive” reception on Tuesday.

“He did so much for the club,” he said. “He won three league titles and turned the club around. It’s 20 years since that first league title under him.

“I know he was manager of Spurs, but that was a while back and, if you look at in the round, he was a great thing for Chelsea Football Club. I don’t think there will be any hostility at all.”

There is certainly a different feel to this game as Mourinho is not managing a domestic rival.

But the Benfica manager has already talked about “forgetting feelings”, which won’t come as a surprise to those who know him best.

“We all evolve,” Morais said. “Time asks that of us. But the passion and ambition remain the same. Jose’s fire has not dimmed.”

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Afghanistan’s Bagram airbase: Why is Trump desperate to take it back?

United States President Donald Trump has demanded that Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban hand the country’s Bagram airbase over to Washington, five years after he signed a deal with the group that paved the way for the US withdrawal from Kabul.

At a news conference with United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer on September 18, Trump told reporters that the US government was “trying to get [Bagram] back”.

“We gave it to [the Taliban] for nothing. We want that base back,” he said.

Two days later, on September 20, he followed up that demand with a pointed threat on his Truth Social platform: “If Afghanistan doesn’t give Bagram Airbase back to those that built it, the United States of America, BAD THINGS ARE GOING TO HAPPEN!!!”

The Taliban has rejected Trump’s demand.

This is not the first time, however, that Trump has shown his interest in retaking the former US military base. In a February 2025 media briefing, now deleted from the White House’s website, Trump was quoted as saying, “We were going to keep Bagram. We were going to keep a small force on Bagram.”

So what is the Bagram base, why does Trump want it so badly, what is its strategic significance, and can the US get it back?

What is the Bagram airbase?

Four years after US forces evacuated their military bases in Afghanistan, Bagram remains a contentious piece of real estate that the Trump administration wants to retake from the Taliban.

The base, which has two concrete runways – one 3.6km long (2.2 miles), the other 3km (1.9 miles) – lies about 50km (31 miles) outside Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul. It has been a strategic stronghold for the many military powers that have controlled Afghanistan – and fought over it – over the past half-century.

The airfield was first developed by the Soviet Union in the 1950s, an early shot fired at the dawn of the Cold War that would drag Afghanistan into its vortex for decades. But the Afghan government of the time controlled the base.

That changed after the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979 — its troops stayed in charge of the base for a decade, before Moscow withdrew from the country.

In 1991, the Soviet-backed government of Mohammad Najibullah lost control of Bagram to the Northern Alliance, one of the most influential opposition groups fighting for power. But the Northern Alliance would itself lose control of the base to the Taliban.

After the NATO invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, the base then became a strategic centrepiece of the US military’s presence in the country, used as a special command for various military divisions, steadily growing in size, capacity and utility.

At its peak in 2009, the base could host about 10,000 people. While US forces controlled the base, it was shared with other NATO members, including units from the UK’s Royal Marines.

Aside from military units, the base hosted a large prison that became notorious for abuse and torture of Afghan detainees by US forces and their local partners. Bagram was also home to a fully functioning hospital, housing barracks for thousands of soldiers, and several US chain restaurants, like Pizza Hut and Subway.

The base and facilities were evacuated, with much of the weapons and equipment destroyed, by US forces during the withdrawal of August 2021. What remained was looted by local groups before the Taliban seized control.

Why does Trump want the Bagram base back?

Trump has frequently complained about how the US left major weapons behind in its hasty evacuation in 2021, in effect handing them over to the Taliban and other armed groups in Afghanistan.

But experts say that the real appeal of Bagram lies not in the largely wrecked military equipment there, nor in the abandoned chain restaurants on the complex.

There is the symbolic value of showcasing US control over a base built by a geopolitical rival. “It has always been of important strategic value, since it was built by the Soviet Union,” said Ibraheem Bahiss, senior analyst at Crisis Group.

The rugged, mountainous terrain of Afghanistan makes controlling its airspace difficult, with few places suitable for landing large military planes and weapons carriers. Bagram – the country’s largest airbase – offers rare respite.

The Bagram base played a “crucial role” in Washington’s so-called “war on terror” after 2001, said Hekmatullah Azamy, security analyst with the Centre for Conflict and Peace Studies (CAPS), a think tank with headquarters in Kabul.

Major air missions took off from Bagram, including ones that led to civilian killings, such as the 2015 bombing of a hospital run by Doctors Without Borders, known by its French initials MSF, in Kunduz, in which 42 people were killed and at least 30 were injured.

The US commander in Afghanistan repeatedly changed his narrative on what prompted the bombing, before eventually acknowledging it was a mistake. Then US-President Barack Obama apologised.

But even though the US has now left Afghanistan, Bagram’s value has only increased, Azamy said, with the rise of Chinese influence in the region.

“As the priorities shifted, and the US started viewing China as the number one threat, this base is seemingly important once again, primarily because of its proximity to China and the significance it has,” he said.

Bagram is about 800km (about 500 miles) from the Chinese border, and about 2,400km (about 1,500 miles) from the nearest Chinese missile factory in Xinjiang.

Trump has also referred to China as a key reason for wanting to retake control of Bagram, saying this month in London that the base is “an hour away from where [China] makes its nuclear weapons”. Back in February, Trump also claimed that the base was “exactly one hour away from where China makes its nuclear missiles”.

Chinese officials, on their part, have pushed back. “Afghanistan’s future should be decided by its own people. Stirring up tension and creating confrontation in the region won’t be popular,” Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Lin Jian said after Trump’s comments alongside UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

Can the US retake Bagram?

This is questionable, say experts.

“In theory, Bagram is a strategic base for the US in terms of projecting power into the region,” said Ashley Jackson, co-director at the Geneva-headquartered Centre on Armed Groups. She pointed out, however, that “the move would seem to be in direct contradiction to the US policy of ending the military mission in Afghanistan”.

“The sheer logistics of negotiating redeployment and handing back would be extremely challenging and lengthy, and it’s not clear that this would serve either side’s strategic interests,” Jackson added.

Both Azamy and Bahiss believe the Taliban, too, have no incentive to want to give up Bagram.

Such a move would “crush the Taliban’s legitimacy,” Azamy said.

Bahiss said the group “would be unwilling to accept a foreign footprint on Afghanistan, including at Bagram airbase”.

The Taliban movement was built in large part on the idea of fighting foreign occupation and influence, Kabul-based Bahiss pointed out. The group has often argued that “as long as foreign troops hold even one metre of soil, jihad or holy war is an obligation”.

“Any negotiations with a foreign military would shatter their strength and risk their own members deserting the movement in large droves,” Bahiss said.

How has the Taliban responded?

Indeed, the Taliban, on their part, have been very clear, and have repeatedly rejected Trump’s demands. On September 21, the group cited the 2020 agreement that Trump’s administration signed with the Taliban in Doha.

“It should be recalled that, under the Doha Agreement, the US pledged that ‘it will not use or threaten force against the territorial integrity or political independence of Afghanistan, nor interfere in its internal affairs,” Hamdullah Fitrat, deputy spokesperson of the Taliban, said on social media.

“The US needs to remain faithful to its commitments.”

Fitrat’s comments followed Trump’s threat of “bad things” happening to Afghanistan if the Taliban did not hand Bagram over.

What is the US game plan?

The Taliban’s refusal to negotiate over the base has not deterred Trump, so far, and analysts believe the US might be using the Bagram demand as a bargaining chip.

It could be “a means of demanding something grand, like Bagram, and settling for something smaller and more symbolic down the road, [like] the return of some weapons and equipment, which the president has talked about previously,” Jackson of the Centre on Armed Groups said.

A 2022 assessment by the then-US Department of Defense, now the Department of War, found that more than $7bn worth of weapons had been abandoned in Afghanistan, much of which is now believed to be in the Taliban’s control.

And if the Bagram demand is a gambit in a larger negotiation, that might be good news for the Taliban, too, say analysts. Afghanistan’s rulers have been seeking wider international legitimacy, and talks with the US are a step towards that.

“In some ways, the Trump administration is [saying that it is] open to the idea of engagement with the Taliban,” Kabul-based Bahiss said, pointing to other examples of the US president showing a willingness to build ties with leaders Washington has previously treated as enemies: from Ahmed al-Sharaa in Syria to Vladimir Putin in Russia and Kim Jong Un in North Korea.

But ultimately, Bahiss said, Trump’s desire to do business with the Taliban will also depend on what is on the table for him.

“What can the Taliban offer? Is it going to be private investment, minerals, or military assets like Bagram?” asked Bahiss.