Champion Lowry recalls incredible scenes as Open returns to Portrush

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“Have you heard a noise like that on a golf course ever before?”

I recall bellowing those words to BBC Radio 5 Live listeners amid the celebratory din that accompanied Shane Lowry tapping in to complete his tumultuous victory at the 2019 Open.

That short putt at Royal Portrush capped one of the greatest performances ever witnessed at golf’s most historic championship. He finished at 15 under par, six clear of England’s Tommy Fleetwood.

It was no cliff hanger, the outcome had been known with an hour to spare but it was still a properly captivating moment that prompted such a full throated roar. An Irishman ending the 68-year wait to crown an Open champion on the island of Ireland.

This was a nigh-on perfect script for one of the most eagerly anticipated championships ever played. It was such a success it returns to Northern Ireland’s Antrim Coast this coming week, just six years on from that extraordinary competition.

Back then, previous major winners Rory McIlroy, Graeme McDowell, Padraig Harrington and Darren Clarke had been at the centre of the local pre-tournament hype.

Lowry only came to the fore when the golf began.

An early 67 put him within a shot of first-round leader JB Holmes. Lowry matched that score the following day before firing a scintillating 63 to take a four-shot lead into the final day.

By the end he was a rampant winner. “The Saturday afternoon, the last few holes was the most incredible experience my whole career,” Lowry told BBC Sport.

“Like, Sunday it was unbelievable, but Saturday was one of those days that I will remember forever.

“Martin Slumbers (the former R&A chief executive) said it is one of his most memorable Open moments and to hear him say that was pretty cool.

‘I couldn’t eat I was so nervous’

Who knows what might have happened had Fleetwood made the most of a birdie chance on the first hole of the final round and Lowry had missed a challenging bogey putt on that opening green.

His lead might have shrunk to a single shot in the blink of an eye. But it did not and Lowry completed a composed 72 to cruise home, roared on by the joyfully partisan galleries.

“Sunday was a tough day, but I got through it pretty well and thankfully I came out on the right side,” said the 38-year-old from Clara, County Offaly.

It was when Lowry birdied the 15th moments after Fleetwood’s double bogey at the previous hole that the tournament was effectively over. The Irishman’s father, Brendan, had somehow got himself inside the ropes and was punching the air with delight.

“The first time I saw him inside the ropes was on the fourth green,” Lowry recalled. “And I made birdie there.

“Obviously he wouldn’t have been able to see much outside the ropes.

“But that’s why I do all this. You do it for your family and when I got to the 18th green, when you see everyone at the back of the green, that’s when it hit me really hard what I had just achieved.”

Until then he had been in that often elusive mental zone of total concentration. It was as though he was the only person unaware of the cold, wet weather – the only man on the course not wearing waterproofs.

“I put them on on the eighth green and I three putted,” he recalled. “And then I took them off for my tee shot on nine.

“Yeah, I was wearing a short sleeve, like a gilet top and it was pretty cold. I don’t know what I was thinking, I couldn’t eat, I was so nervous.

“I don’t know what I was feeling but I knew what was at stake and if I didn’t succeed how bad it would have been. I just didn’t feel the weather like everyone else!”

Lowry did not properly celebrate until he escaped Portrush and arrived in Dublin late that Sunday night. “I drove there,” he said.

“I didn’t have a drink until I got to Dublin. I mean what a night it was and the days that followed. And if I did it again, I’d do the same all over again.

‘I’m not going to be happy unless I perform again’

Lowry had reason for optimism heading into that 2019 Open. He had won early that year in Abu Dhabi and decent form followed. But he also knew it could be a challenging week on home soil.

“It’s funny, I always find Irish Opens quite difficult to go and play in and perform in because I try so hard and expect a lot of myself,” said the man who landed that title as an amateur in 2009.

“Ultimately I want to win. I really, really want to win another one. And to go and play The Open in Portrush was a whole other level of that expectation and that want to succeed.

“But for some reason, it just went well that week for me. I went in there a little bit more under the radar than I normally would.

“Because of Rory and GMac and Clarkie and the Portrush connection there, I felt like I was just able to go up and do my thing.”

He knows returning this time will not have the same dynamic. While Masters champion McIlroy will still be centre of attention, the spotlight will also shine on Lowry.

“The first time in Portrush I felt there was no expectation on me apart from myself and you know it was all a Rory show. But I feel like it’s gonna be a little bit different this time,” he said.

“There will have to be something in place for me to go about my business the way I want because, ultimately, yes, it’s great – I won there last time – but I’m not going to be happy unless I perform again there this time.”

Since that win he has claimed the 2022 BMW PGA title at Wentworth and won last year’s Zurich Classic pairs event with McIlroy on the PGA Tour. Lowry climbed into the world’s top 10 earlier this year and is currently 18th in the standings.

He was ranked 33rd when he lifted the Claret Jug and now a veteran of two Ryder Cups he is clearly a finer player better equipped to deal with the game’s biggest moments than he was in 2019.

He laughed when I put this to him. “You have maybe given me something there, so maybe I’ll use that,” he smiled.

“I always feel like when I go to the Open Championship, if I can rock up mentally in the right place I can achieve something good that week.

“You know, not only that week in Portrush, but even Troon last year (finishing sixth).

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Feminist icon Gisele Pelicot awarded France’s top civic honour: Report

Gisele Pelicot, who has been internationally hailed after testifying against her husband and dozens of other men who raped her, has been awarded France’s top civic honour.

Pelicot, 72, was named knight of the Legion of Honour on a list announced before France’s July 14 national day, the AFP news agency reported on Sunday.

She was among 589 people named for the honour, which recognises merit-based national service.

Pelicot refused to remain anonymous and publicly testified at a trial in 2024 against her former husband, Dominique Pelicot, who drugged her and arranged for her to be raped by dozens of men over a decade.

His co-conspirators tried to claim they were unaware that the acts were not consensual and blamed the husband.

Gisele Pelicot at the time called it a “trial of cowardice” and asserted there was no excuse for abusing her when she was unconscious. Her testimony gripped the world and led to Dominique Pelicot and 50 co-defendants being found guilty in the mass-rape case.

A woman holds a poster honouring Pelicot during a demonstration to mark International Women’s Day in Madrid, Spain, March 8, 2025 [File: Susana Vera/Reuters]

Lauded for her courage in exposing the case, which forced a change in France’s rape law, she has since been named among the world’s most influential people in international lists.

Gisele Pelicot has not spoken further since the trial. She is focusing on writing a book, scheduled for release in 2026, that delves into her perspective of the ordeal, according to her lawyer.

Writers, artists and international figures are also on the Legion of Honour list.

MATCH PREVIEW: PSG, Chelsea Set For Club World Cup Final Showdown

The curtain comes down on the first edition of FIFA’s expanded Club World Cup when reigning European champions Paris Saint-Germain face Chelsea in Sunday’s final at the MetLife Stadium, with Donald Trump among those set to be in attendance.

It is the kind of glamour match-up that FIFA president Gianni Infantino would have been hoping for to wrap up the tournament, which on Saturday he labelled as marking the start of “the golden era of club football”.

Chelsea coach Enzo Maresca acknowledged ahead of the game that PSG are “probably in this moment the best team in the world”, and the French side are hoping to cap off the most remarkable of seasons by completing a stunning clean sweep of trophies.

Paris Saint-Germain’s Brazilian defender #05 Marquinhos lifts the trophy next to his teammates after the UEFA Champions League final football match between Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and Inter Milan in Munich, southern Germany on May 31, 2025. (Photo by Marco BERTORELLO / AFP)

PSG won a French league and cup double before claiming the UEFA Champions League for the first time in their history with a record-breaking 5-0 victory over Inter Milan in the final at the end of May.

Luis Enrique’s side have carried that form over into the Club World Cup, putting four goals past Atletico Madrid in the group stage and four more past Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami before defeating Bayern Munich in the quarter-finals.

They then produced a masterclass in a 4-0 thrashing of Real Madrid in the semi-finals on Wednesday.

Paris-Saint Germain’s players throw up in the air. Paris Saint-Germain’s Spanish head coach, Luis Enrique, as they celebrate after winning the match and the French championship title following the French L1 football match between Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and SCO Angers at The Parc des Princes Stadium in Paris on April 5, 2025. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP)

“It has been a fantastic season and for us it is very important that we end it in the best possible manner,” Luis Enrique said as he spoke to reporters on Friday.

It would be a shock if Chelsea claimed the trophy against a PSG side led by Ballon d’Or candidate Ousmane Dembele.

However, the Stamford Bridge side came to the United States fresh from finishing fourth in the Premier League and winning the UEFA Conference League.

Chelsea’s Spanish goalkeeper #01 Robert Sanchez, Chelsea’s Spanish defender #03 Marc Cucurella, Chelsea’s English defender #04 Tosin Adarabioyo, Chelsea’s English defender #24 Reece James and Fluminense’s Brazilian forward #09 Everaldo eye the ball during the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 semifinal football match between Brazil’s Fluminense and England’s Chelsea at the MetLife stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on July 8, 2025. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP)

“They are one of the hottest teams in the world at the moment, but this is the final, a one-off game,” said Chelsea’s Reece James.

“Everyone has them down as strong favourites, but I have been in many finals before where we have been favourites and we have not come out on top.

“That doesn’t mean too much to me, and I don’t really care that everyone is bigging up the opposition.”

Chelsea were hoping that midfield lynchpin Moises Caicedo would recover in time from a twisted ankle picked up in the semi-final victory over Fluminense on Tuesday.

READ ALSO: Liverpool To Retire Diogo Jota’s Number 20 Shirt

Heat and huge prize money 

Chelsea’s Brazilian forward #20 Joao Pedro celebrates with his teammate Chelsea’s Argentinian midfielder #08 Enzo Fernandez after scoring his team’s second goal during the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 semifinal football match between Brazil’s Fluminense and England’s Chelsea at the MetLife stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on July 8, 2025. (Photo by CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP)

The match will be played at the 82,500-capacity MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, with the Manhattan skyline as a backdrop. The home of NFL sides the New York Giants and New York Jets will also be the venue for the 2026 World Cup final.

It goes ahead at 3:00 pm local time (1900 GMT) amid ongoing concerns about the impact of high temperatures during the tournament, with Chelsea’s Enzo Fernandez warning on Friday that playing in the middle of the afternoon was “very dangerous”.

There are also concerns about the long-term impact on players of the match calendar – the final will be the 65th game for PSG since their season began last August, and the 64th for Chelsea.

However, the financial rewards for all teams involved in the Club World Cup are enormous, especially for the finalists.

Chelsea and PSG are assured to go home with over $100 million in prize money, with the definitive amount to become clear after the final – that money will be particularly welcome for Chelsea after they were recently fined by UEFA for breaching financial rules.

 U.S. President Donald Trump and President of Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) Gianni Infantino unveil the 2025 Club World Cup trophy in the Oval Office at the White House on March 07, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

Infantino, meanwhile, was in a buoyant mood as he spoke to the media at Trump Tower in New York City on Saturday.

“We created something new, something which is here to stay, something which is changing the landscape of club football,” he said of the 32-team tournament, the next edition of which is set to take place in 2029.

“It is already the most successful club competition in the world.”

Gavin & Stacey favourite announces retirement from acting – ‘the finale was my last job’

The Gavin & Stacey Christmas finale was watched by millions of fans on Christmas Day – but one for one of the stars it will be the last time they will be seen on screen. Larry Lamb today announced his plans to step away from acting for good.

The star, 77, said he was delighted to end his illustrious career by playing Mick Shipman in the BBC sitcom. Larry said he is happy to end on a high and let others perform the ‘bigger roles.’

As well as starring as loveable patriarch Mick in the Ruth Jones and James Corden written sitcom, Larry was also known as the evil Archie Mitchell in EastEnders.

However, Larry said out of all the roles he’s held in his six decades long career, playing Gavin & Stacey’s Mick will always be his favourite.





Gavin & Stacey: The Finale (BBC) Moment where Mick (Larry Lamb) stands up in the church and Smithy (James Corden) realises he cannot marry Sonia (Laura Aikman)

He said today: “You get so involved with these characters that they become your favourite at that time, they are the focus of your life, but to finish up in my 70s playing a character like Mick who is beloved by millions of people, you have to give the writers credit… at this stage in my career Mick is the closest to my heart.”

He continued: ‘I have had a very fortunate career; I’ve done so much that I am really proud of that maybe not so many people know. I have worked at the Royal Shakespeare company, the National Theatre, I have been in 12 West End shows, I have done all the principal fringe theatres in London, on Broadway, I have been very lucky and now I am quite happy to let someone else play the big roles.’

Mick said a lot of people don’t realise the variety of his acting career. “If you have been through a life in entertainment and people don’t all know you to suddenly where pretty much everybody knows you as a character…

‘I find it’s a reward, it’s better to be known than unknown as far as I’m concerned. Particularly if you are known as a character that people really love… what a way to finish your working life,” he told the Daily Mail.





As Archie Mitchell, with Roxy Mitchell (Rita Simons) on EastEnders on 2008


As Archie Mitchell, with Roxy Mitchell (Rita Simons) on EastEnders on 2008

Larry reunited with the Gavin & Stacey cast at the Bafta Awards in May this year where they were expected to take home the Memorable TV Moment award.

However, they were pipped by Chris McCausland on Strictly Come Dancing as the blind comedian performed a ‘blackout dance’ with the lights turned down.

Larry said Ruth Jones had asked him to speak on behalf of the actors and crew if the award had gone their way.

Speaking after fans finally got to see the long-awaited and much hyped finale, Larry said he was ‘relieved’ it was over.

He said: “In a funny, sad sort of way I’m relieved that it’s finished because in the end people were desperate to see the end of it, and then to know that the whole thing’s all been wrapped up, the story’s told, and it’s had its life.

“You know, that’s what I like about it – we can all sit back and say this is a completed story.”

The show’s Christmas 2024 finale episode saw Neil “Smithy” Smith, played by co-writer James Corden, finally decide to marry Vanessa “Nessa” Jenkins, played by fellow co-writer Ruth Jones, after leaving Sonia (Laura Aikman) at the altar.

Prior to the final episode, the show spanned for three series following the lives of Essex-born Gavin and his Welsh wife Stacey and their friends and family, after they first met on work phone calls.

Summer’s hottest style trend is fruit print– shop 6 of our favourite pieces from £18

Tutti fruity fashion has taken over the high street this summer, and we’ve rounded up the best style buys from £18 from brands like ASOS, New Look and Next

Fruit prints are taking over, shop our best style buys from £18(Image: Mirror)

Fruit prints are having a serious moment this summer, and we can’t get enough of them. From zesty lemons to juicy cherries, these fun and playful prints are cropping up everywhere, adding a pop of colour to even the simplest of outfits.

Whether you’re heading on holiday or just want to bring some summer vibes to your everyday wardrobe, we’ve rounded up the very best tutti fruity finds on the high street.From flattering swimwear, chic maxi dresses and cool two-piece sets, check out our top style buys from New Look, Next, ASOS and more.

READ MORE: Sol de Janeiro’s Discovery Set sale will get you beach-ready body mists for £6 each

READ MORE: Fruit-themed delights– style, beauty and home buys from £12 to give a dopamine hit

NEW LOOK

New Look model
A matching set always looks chic and put together(Image: New Look )

A matching set is one of the easiest ways to look chic and put together. They require minimal effort but always look stylish. We’re obsessed with this multicoloured, fruit-printed set from New Look. The floaty maxi skirt screams holiday, while the puff-sleeve cropped top adds a touch of glam. Pair it with some strappy sandals and a raffia handbag for the ultimate Italian girl summer look.

SHOP THE LOOK: Multicoloured Fruit Print Puff Sleeve Cropped Top, £24.99 here and Multicoloured Fruit Print Midi Skirt, £32.99 here

RIVER ISLAND

River Island co ord on model
This co-ord is a summer wardrobe must-have(Image: River Island )

Hailing from River Island’s collaboration with Atlas, this bubble-hem crop top and linen trousers are a summer wardrobe must-have. Wear the pieces together for a chic-looking outfit, or mix and match them with other pieces in your wardrobe to maximise their full potential.

SHOP THE LOOK: Cream Atlas Bubble Hem Crop Top, £29 here and Cream Atlas Linen Blend Trousers, £39 here

NEXT

Next swimming costume on model
This swimming costume sculpts in all the right places(Image: Next)

Fruit print is taking over not just clothing but swimwear, too. Both flattering and stylish, this shape-enhancing swimsuit is all about supporting your curves. It’s got tummy-smoothing support and a subtle wrap detail at the neckline that helps to sculpt in all the right places. Whether you’re lounging poolside or heading for a swim, this cossie will have you looking and feeling your best.

SHOP THE LOOK: Bright Fruit/Tropical Print Shaping Tummy Control Swimsuit, £32 here

NOBODY’S CHILD

Nobody's Child midi dress
The perfect summer outfit for day or night(Image: Nobody’s Child)

The ruffled straps and fitted bodice of this dreamy Nobody’s Child dress give it that feminine and romantic feel, while the fruity print gives it that playful twist.

Just add some gold jewellery and strappy sandals for the perfect summer outfit, day or night.

SHOP THE LOOK: Cream Printed Cassidy Midi Dress, currently £62 here

ASOS

ASOS bikini on model
ASOS have an amazing selection of swimwear(Image: ASOS)

ASOS always nail their swimwear, and this year is no exception. This bikini from the Curve range features a supportive halterneck style, stylish gold ring detail and an all-over tropical print. Throw over a crochet beach dress or some linen trousers for a beach to bar look.

SHOP THE LOOK: Curve Celeste ring detail bikini top, £24 here and Curve Celeste high leg high waist bikini bottom, £18 here

PHASE EIGHT

Phase Eight dress on model
The perfect ‘Italian summer’ outfit (Image: Phase Eight )
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Covered in a postcard-style Sicilian summer, channel your inner Italian girl with this gorgeous midi from Phase Eight. The puff sleeves add a little drama while the maxi silhouette makes it perfect for evening strolls or beachside dinners.

Grange Hill’s Lee MacDonald’s unsuspecting symptom as he sobbed after cancer diagnosis

EXCLUSIVE: Grange Hill and EastEnders star Lee MacDonald experienced two terrifying cancer scares in the short space of 18 months. The actor has now opened up about his health

Grange Hill’s Lee MacDonald’s unsuspecting symptom as he sobbed after cancer diagnosis (Image: Ken McKay/ITV/REX/Shutterstock)

Grange Hill star Lee MacDonald has put all his energy into campaigning after experiencing two terrifying cancer scares in 18 months. The Zammo McGuire actor had his first cancer scare last year after a “little black spot” appeared on his eye, which he initially brushed off as a mole.

He was more ‘annoyed’ by it due to its close proximity to his eye but, after it started ‘weeping’, his wife encouraged him to see a doctor, which still didn’t cause Lee to worry. “Cancer didn’t even cross my mind going into the doctor’s. I went there purely because it was annoying me, and it was there, and I wanted to get rid of it,” he recalled of the doctor’s visit as he explained how he thought it would turn out to be a harmless mole or pimple.

“So I thought, a bit of cream and it’ll go.” However, his world soon turned upside down when the doctor told him the black spot looked like cancer.

READ MORE: ‘Lightweight and glowy’ £26 sunscreen bundle now £10 in cheaper-than-Amazon deal

Lee MacDonald
Lee had two cancer scares in 18 months(Image: O2)

“And [the doctor] said, it looks like a BCC. I said, ‘What’s the BCC?’ He said, ‘It’s a skin cancer.’ Honestly, my heart sank. I sat there for two or three minutes without saying anything, and then when I got downstairs to where my friend Andy was picking me up… I sat in the car and I cried for an hour.

“I just sat there crying because that word cancer just really scared me. And you hear horror stories with cancer.”

BCC, or basal cell carcinoma, is a common type of skin cancer that starts on the top layer of the skin, the NHS says. A BCC is a ‘non-melanoma skin cancer can often be easily treated’.

While his friend tried to keep him calm, he couldn’t help but think about how his life could change so drastically because of one tiny spot. “So all this period of time in my head, I’m thinking, I’ve got cancer, which was horrible,” he revealed.

Lee MacDonald
The Grange Hill star broke down in tears for an hour after a doctor feared he had cancer(Image: BBC)

Lee returned to the doctor’s for another biopsy and learned the spot wasn’t cancerous, despite the doctor’s initial fears. Although it was the positive news he wanted to hear, he gained a new perspective on his health as he teamed up with O2’s campaign in partnership with The British Skin Foundation to highlight the importance of sun safety.

Earlier this month, Lee found a rash on his face that he first assumed was from shaving. “Because I was shaving every other day and it would bleed, I just thought it’s a rash where I’m shaving on it, I’m just aggravating it, so it’s never going to clear up.”

Lee stopped shaving around it to see if the problem would stop persisting, but nothing changed. He quickly booked an appointment with the doctor for a check-up and learned it was actually keratosis, a rash with pre-cancerous cells. When he was told of the diagnosis, his first thought was: “Oh, not again.”

The EastEnders star will soon be getting the rash burnt off, which will ‘hopefully get rid of it’. “So hopefully, you know, it will get rid of it. But again, quite scary. So that’s two scares in 18 months,” the actor told us.

Between the ages 16 and 26, Lee used to spend an hour a week using sun beds – split between Tuesday and Thursday. He still used it despite ‘going bright red and then going white again the next day’. Lee admitted: “I just felt that it made me feel a bit better, a bit tan.”

In a stark warning, Lee urged men and women to get their skin checked and ‘protect themselves’. He begged: “If you’ve got something there, go and get it checked, please.”

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O2’s new ‘Skincase’ campaign, backed by The British Skin Foundation, tackles a crucial issue of sun protection complacency, while O2 proudly stands as the only major UK network providing inclusive EU roaming up to 25GB, ensuring customers stay connected and safe abroad.

The Macmillan Support Line offers confidential support to people living with cancer and their loved ones. If you need to talk, call us on 0808 808 0000.