Fire crush Phoenix to stave off elimination

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The Hundred men’s competition, Edgbaston

Birmingham Phoenix 138-9 (100 balls): Bethell 38 (28); Green 3-27

Welsh Fire 140-2 (89 balls): Smith 47* (36), Eskinazi 42 (29)

Fire won by eight wickets

Welsh Fire cruised to a comprehensive eight-wicket win over Birmingham Phoenix to keep their fading hopes of reaching The Hundred men’s knockout stages alive.

Defeat at Edgbaston would have ended their chances of making the top three but after restricting Phoenix to 138-9, they knocked off the runs with 11 balls to spare.

Opener Stephen Eskinazi made a quickfire 42 and Jonny Bairstow, moved down to three, came in and thumped 35 off 21 balls, while Steve Smith batted through the innings for an unbeaten 47 off 36 as Fire made light work of the chase.

Earlier, wickets fell regularly during a Phoenix innings that repeatedly threatened to ignite but never quite did so.

Jacob Bethell top-scored with 38 from 28 balls, while Chris Green took 3-27 for Fire and his fellow off-spinner Ben Kellaway claimed 2-10 on debut.

The result leaves both sides on eight points, still eight back of Northern Superchargers in third, with two games left to play, meaning qualification remains unlikely.

Missed opportunities leave Phoenix on the brink

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Phoenix came into the match knowing a win would put them level on points with Southern Brave in fourth.

They would have backed themselves to see off the bottom-placed side, especially at home, and put themselves in the thick of it in the fight for the top three.

Yet they end the evening level on points with Fire and needing snookers to qualify.

Even after losing Ben Duckett cheaply, they built a strong foundation through Will Smeed and Joe Clarke – only for both to fall in quick succession when they looked set to kick on, the latter to a particularly soft dismissal.

Liam Livingstone then arrived, full of intent, to bludgeon a pair of enormous sixes as Bethell settled at the other end but he fell before he could do any significant damage.

Bethell was forced to hold back slightly to avoid a full-on collapse but kicked into gear late on, only to hole out with four balls left.

What is happening on Saturday?

It is another four-day game on Saturday with double-headers seeing Northern Superchargers host Oval Invincibles (11:00 and 14:30 BST) and London Spirit face Southern Brave (14:30 and 18:00 BST).

There will be ball-by-ball radio commentary on every game on BBC Sounds.

Related topics

  • Franchise Cricket
  • The Hundred
  • Cricket

England open World Cup with 11-try win over USA

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  • 719 Comments

Women’s Rugby World Cup – Pool A

England (28) 69

Tries: Kabeya, Botterman, Muir, Kildunne (2), Dow, Cokayne, Breach (2), Atkin- Davies (2) Con: Harrison (6), Sing

United States (7) 7

England delivered an impressive statement of intent in the Rugby World Cup opener by scorching to a 69-7 victory against the United States in front of a record crowd of 42,723 in Sunderland.

The American Eagles, who are ranked 10th in the world, fought hard but faded badly as England’s quality off the bench powered them to 11 tries.

Full-back Ellie Kildunne marked both her scores with her usual square-dance celebration – a move inspired by one of the team’s WhatsApp groups – while Jess Breach, with whom she presents a podcast called Rugby Rodeo, followed suit after her own double.

The United States lost a Pacific Four Series Test to reigning world champions New Zealand 79-14 in May, so England may consider this scoreline par for the course.

But, backed by a partying crowd in cowboy hats and fine voice, it was a display that only stoked belief that the Red Roses can make good on their status as tournament favourites after losing in five of the past six finals.

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Maher’s Eagles’ wings clipped by impressive hosts

After pop star Anne-Marie’s frenetic pre-match show, England fluffed their own first lines, failing to catch the kick-off.

That, combined with a scrappy exit, allowed the United States an early spell of possession.

Ilona Maher, whose social media fame has spread word about the game and propelled this tournament to a new audience, made a brief indent on an inside line, but otherwise England’s defence forced the visitors into retreat.

The contrast when the Red Roses got hold of the ball was stark.

Breach hit a line, Zoe Harrison dabbed a kick in behind and Abby Dow chased like fury.

England made metres hand over fist and, that intensity, combined with set-piece dominance, made a breakthrough inevitable.

It came via a familiar route.

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The United States were similarly overpowered at the scrum, conceding three penalties in the opening 20 minutes.

Their opponents’ lack of platform gave England freedom to experiment and a precise Megan Jones cross-kick created their second try, Dow chasing, scrapping and gathering, before Hannah Botterman rampaged between two tacklers and swatted aside full-back Lotte Sharp to score.

The United States shot back as second row Erica Jarrell-Searcy shrugged off Breach in midfield and showed superb pace to scamper in.

With their lead cut to 14-7, England could have got twitchy, but any opening-night nerves were eased as United States centre Alev Kelter, who plays her club rugby with Loughborough Lightning, was shown yellow a minute after Jarrell-Searcy’s score.

Kelter’s impulsive slap of the ball out of scrum-half Natasha Hunt’s hands proved costly.

During Kelter’s 10-minute stint in the sin-bin, Maud Muir shunted over from close range before player of the match Kildunne crossed at the end of a sweeping coast-to-coast move.

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Two minutes after the interval, the excellent centre combination of Tatyana Heard and Jones combined to excellent effect to deliver a fifth try.

Jones carved through the heart of the United States defence, before Heard whipped the ball across her body to put Dow into the corner.

The contest didn’t entirely dissolve into one-way traffic.

Breach’s second try came after the Eagles spilled the ball deep in England territory and world player of the year Kildunne raced away upfield.

But England’s ability to unload a clutch of quality replacements means they were always accelerating away from their opponents with hookers Amy Cokayne and Lark Atkin-Davies, twice, also crossing.

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Line-ups

England: Kildunne; Dow, Jones, Heard, Breach; Harrison, Hunt; Botterman, Cokayne, Muir, Talling, Ward, Aldcroft (capt), Kabeya, Matthews.

Replacements: Atkin-Davies, Clifford, Bern, Galligan, Feaunati, L Packer, Scarratt, Sing.

United States: Sharp; Henrich, Maher, Kelter, Mataitoga; Hawkins, Ortiz; Rogers, Treder, Sagapolu, Brody, Jarrell-Searcy, Zackary, Perris-Redding, Johnson.

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Match officials

Referee: Aimee Barrett-Theron (South Africa)

Assistant referees: Natarsha Ganley (New Zealand) and Maria Heitor (France)

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What’s happening in the World Cup on Saturday?

Pool A: Australia v Samoa (12:00), Salford Community Stadium – iPlayer, BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app

Pool B: Scotland v Wales (14:45), Salford Community Stadium – BBC One from 14:15 and BBC Radio Sports Extra 2 from 14:35

Pool B: Canada v Fiji (17:30), York Community Stadium – iPlayer, BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app

Related topics

  • Rugby Union

England open World Cup with 11-try win over USA

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

  • 719 Comments

Women’s Rugby World Cup – Pool A

England (28) 69

Tries: Kabeya, Botterman, Muir, Kildunne (2), Dow, Cokayne, Breach (2), Atkin- Davies (2) Con: Harrison (6), Sing

United States (7) 7

England delivered an impressive statement of intent in the Rugby World Cup opener by scorching to a 69-7 victory against the United States in front of a record crowd of 42,723 in Sunderland.

The American Eagles, who are ranked 10th in the world, fought hard but faded badly as England’s quality off the bench powered them to 11 tries.

Full-back Ellie Kildunne marked both her scores with her usual square-dance celebration – a move inspired by one of the team’s WhatsApp groups – while Jess Breach, with whom she presents a podcast called Rugby Rodeo, followed suit after her own double.

The United States lost a Pacific Four Series Test to reigning world champions New Zealand 79-14 in May, so England may consider this scoreline par for the course.

But, backed by a partying crowd in cowboy hats and fine voice, it was a display that only stoked belief that the Red Roses can make good on their status as tournament favourites after losing in five of the past six finals.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Maher’s Eagles’ wings clipped by impressive hosts

After pop star Anne-Marie’s frenetic pre-match show, England fluffed their own first lines, failing to catch the kick-off.

That, combined with a scrappy exit, allowed the United States an early spell of possession.

Ilona Maher, whose social media fame has spread word about the game and propelled this tournament to a new audience, made a brief indent on an inside line, but otherwise England’s defence forced the visitors into retreat.

The contrast when the Red Roses got hold of the ball was stark.

Breach hit a line, Zoe Harrison dabbed a kick in behind and Abby Dow chased like fury.

England made metres hand over fist and, that intensity, combined with set-piece dominance, made a breakthrough inevitable.

It came via a familiar route.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

The United States were similarly overpowered at the scrum, conceding three penalties in the opening 20 minutes.

Their opponents’ lack of platform gave England freedom to experiment and a precise Megan Jones cross-kick created their second try, Dow chasing, scrapping and gathering, before Hannah Botterman rampaged between two tacklers and swatted aside full-back Lotte Sharp to score.

The United States shot back as second row Erica Jarrell-Searcy shrugged off Breach in midfield and showed superb pace to scamper in.

With their lead cut to 14-7, England could have got twitchy, but any opening-night nerves were eased as United States centre Alev Kelter, who plays her club rugby with Loughborough Lightning, was shown yellow a minute after Jarrell-Searcy’s score.

Kelter’s impulsive slap of the ball out of scrum-half Natasha Hunt’s hands proved costly.

During Kelter’s 10-minute stint in the sin-bin, Maud Muir shunted over from close range before player of the match Kildunne crossed at the end of a sweeping coast-to-coast move.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Two minutes after the interval, the excellent centre combination of Tatyana Heard and Jones combined to excellent effect to deliver a fifth try.

Jones carved through the heart of the United States defence, before Heard whipped the ball across her body to put Dow into the corner.

The contest didn’t entirely dissolve into one-way traffic.

Breach’s second try came after the Eagles spilled the ball deep in England territory and world player of the year Kildunne raced away upfield.

But England’s ability to unload a clutch of quality replacements means they were always accelerating away from their opponents with hookers Amy Cokayne and Lark Atkin-Davies, twice, also crossing.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Line-ups

England: Kildunne; Dow, Jones, Heard, Breach; Harrison, Hunt; Botterman, Cokayne, Muir, Talling, Ward, Aldcroft (capt), Kabeya, Matthews.

Replacements: Atkin-Davies, Clifford, Bern, Galligan, Feaunati, L Packer, Scarratt, Sing.

United States: Sharp; Henrich, Maher, Kelter, Mataitoga; Hawkins, Ortiz; Rogers, Treder, Sagapolu, Brody, Jarrell-Searcy, Zackary, Perris-Redding, Johnson.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Match officials

Referee: Aimee Barrett-Theron (South Africa)

Assistant referees: Natarsha Ganley (New Zealand) and Maria Heitor (France)

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

What’s happening in the World Cup on Saturday?

Pool A: Australia v Samoa (12:00), Salford Community Stadium – iPlayer, BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app

Pool B: Scotland v Wales (14:45), Salford Community Stadium – BBC One from 14:15 and BBC Radio Sports Extra 2 from 14:35

Pool B: Canada v Fiji (17:30), York Community Stadium – iPlayer, BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app

Related topics

  • Rugby Union

Lorraine Kelly’s staggering weekly earnings unveiled amid brutal ITV daytime cuts

Despite ITV’s sweeping cuts to its daytime lineup and plans to halve Lorraine’s airtime from 2026, Lorraine Kelly’s production company continues to thrive financially

Lorraine Kelly’s staggering weekly earnings unveiled amid huge ITV daytime cuts(Image: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)

While ITV braces for major job losses and cuts across its daytime schedule, Lorraine Kelly remains one of its highest earners, pulling in around £13,000 a week last year.

The 65-year-old presenter’s financial success comes amid confirmation that her self-titled show will be cut to just 30 minutes a day starting in 2026, with ITV axing 220 jobs across Good Morning Britain, Lorraine, This Morning, and Loose Women.

Despite looming changes, filings from Lorraine’s company, Albatel Ltd, show her earnings remain strong. In 2024, the firm paid £135,504 in Corporation Tax, indicating income of roughly £677,520 which was up from £540,000 in 2022/23, when tax paid totaled £108,505.

Albatel Ltd is now valued at £4.2 million, with £3.3 million in cash reserves and £135,000 in investments, according to The Sun. It comes after Lorraine’s no-expense spared Channel 4 show was unveiled after the brutal ITV cuts.

READ MORE: Richard Osman’s famous wife turns heads at Thursday Murder Club premiereREAD MORE: Strictly fans go wild as Pete Wicks ‘hard launches’ Jowita after months of rumours

It’s unclear how the format changes will impact her income, but the shift is significant. From January 2026, Good Morning Britain will be extended to 9:30am, replacing half an hour of Lorraine, which will now air only 30 weeks a year instead of year-round. On weeks when Lorraine is off-air, GMB will run until 10am.

Kevin Lygo, ITV’s managing director of media and entertainment, defended the shake-up: “Daytime is a really important part of what we do, and these scheduling and production changes will enable us to continue to deliver a schedule providing viewers with the news, debate and discussion they love from the presenters they know and trust, as well as generating savings which will allow us to reinvest across the programme budget in other genres.

Lorraine Kelly remains one of its highest earners, pulling in around £13,000 a week last year
Lorraine Kelly remains one of its highest earners, pulling in around £13,000 a week last year(Image: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)

“These changes also allow us to consolidate our news operations and expand our national, international and regional news output and to build upon our proud history of trusted journalism at a time when our viewers need accurate, unbiased news coverage more than ever.”

It comes as Lorraine is setting sail to Channel 4 with a big-budget travel show around Norway. The daytime host is jumping ship for a new travelogue exploring the land of the Vikings in the Scandinavian country.

Home of the Northern Lights, the 65-year-old will tour the stunning natural beauty it has to offer, across mountains, glaciers and fjords in Lorraine Kelly’s Norwegian Odyssey.

Lorraine Kelly in a maroon dress.
Lorraine has been in the business for over 40 years(Image: Hoda Davaine/Dave Benett/Getty Images for Women of the Year)

Glasgow-born Lorraine got her big break at TV-am as an on-screen reporter covering Scottish news in 1984. She’s fronted shows for ITV and STV, including Good Morning Britain, GMTV, This Morning and Daybreak before landing her own show.

Last year the channel celebrate her glittering career with special Lorraine Kelly: 40 Unforgettable Years, featuring famous colleagues and fans like Piers Morgan, Brian Cox and Craig David.

Looking back at her four-decade journey in the industry, Lorraine said: “I have never had a career plan and I still don’t. I’ve worked hard and I’ve been lucky. I love what I do and I have a wonderful production team and crew.

“As a freelance you live from one yearly contract to the next and you never know what the future holds, but I found my niche. Live morning TV suits me and I love it.”

Article continues below

Follow Mirror Celebs on TikTok , Snapchat , Instagram , Twitter , Facebook , YouTube and Threads.

READ MORE: Shop Dani Dyer’s butter yellow midi dress as she announces Strictly news on The One Show

Lorraine Kelly’s staggering weekly earnings unveiled amid brutal ITV daytime cuts

Despite ITV’s sweeping cuts to its daytime lineup and plans to halve Lorraine’s airtime from 2026, Lorraine Kelly’s production company continues to thrive financially

Lorraine Kelly’s staggering weekly earnings unveiled amid huge ITV daytime cuts(Image: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)

While ITV braces for major job losses and cuts across its daytime schedule, Lorraine Kelly remains one of its highest earners, pulling in around £13,000 a week last year.

The 65-year-old presenter’s financial success comes amid confirmation that her self-titled show will be cut to just 30 minutes a day starting in 2026, with ITV axing 220 jobs across Good Morning Britain, Lorraine, This Morning, and Loose Women.

Despite looming changes, filings from Lorraine’s company, Albatel Ltd, show her earnings remain strong. In 2024, the firm paid £135,504 in Corporation Tax, indicating income of roughly £677,520 which was up from £540,000 in 2022/23, when tax paid totaled £108,505.

Albatel Ltd is now valued at £4.2 million, with £3.3 million in cash reserves and £135,000 in investments, according to The Sun. It comes after Lorraine’s no-expense spared Channel 4 show was unveiled after the brutal ITV cuts.

READ MORE: Richard Osman’s famous wife turns heads at Thursday Murder Club premiereREAD MORE: Strictly fans go wild as Pete Wicks ‘hard launches’ Jowita after months of rumours

It’s unclear how the format changes will impact her income, but the shift is significant. From January 2026, Good Morning Britain will be extended to 9:30am, replacing half an hour of Lorraine, which will now air only 30 weeks a year instead of year-round. On weeks when Lorraine is off-air, GMB will run until 10am.

Kevin Lygo, ITV’s managing director of media and entertainment, defended the shake-up: “Daytime is a really important part of what we do, and these scheduling and production changes will enable us to continue to deliver a schedule providing viewers with the news, debate and discussion they love from the presenters they know and trust, as well as generating savings which will allow us to reinvest across the programme budget in other genres.

Lorraine Kelly remains one of its highest earners, pulling in around £13,000 a week last year
Lorraine Kelly remains one of its highest earners, pulling in around £13,000 a week last year(Image: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)

“These changes also allow us to consolidate our news operations and expand our national, international and regional news output and to build upon our proud history of trusted journalism at a time when our viewers need accurate, unbiased news coverage more than ever.”

It comes as Lorraine is setting sail to Channel 4 with a big-budget travel show around Norway. The daytime host is jumping ship for a new travelogue exploring the land of the Vikings in the Scandinavian country.

Home of the Northern Lights, the 65-year-old will tour the stunning natural beauty it has to offer, across mountains, glaciers and fjords in Lorraine Kelly’s Norwegian Odyssey.

Lorraine Kelly in a maroon dress.
Lorraine has been in the business for over 40 years(Image: Hoda Davaine/Dave Benett/Getty Images for Women of the Year)

Glasgow-born Lorraine got her big break at TV-am as an on-screen reporter covering Scottish news in 1984. She’s fronted shows for ITV and STV, including Good Morning Britain, GMTV, This Morning and Daybreak before landing her own show.

Last year the channel celebrate her glittering career with special Lorraine Kelly: 40 Unforgettable Years, featuring famous colleagues and fans like Piers Morgan, Brian Cox and Craig David.

Looking back at her four-decade journey in the industry, Lorraine said: “I have never had a career plan and I still don’t. I’ve worked hard and I’ve been lucky. I love what I do and I have a wonderful production team and crew.

“As a freelance you live from one yearly contract to the next and you never know what the future holds, but I found my niche. Live morning TV suits me and I love it.”

Article continues below

Follow Mirror Celebs on TikTok , Snapchat , Instagram , Twitter , Facebook , YouTube and Threads.

READ MORE: Shop Dani Dyer’s butter yellow midi dress as she announces Strictly news on The One Show