James Haskell’s ‘mad body transformation’ since splitting from Chloe Madeley

Sports star James Haskell is known for his professional rugby union career before splitting from Chloe Madeley two years ago

Former rugby union ace James Haskell admits he has a “mad body transformation” since splitting from Chloe Madeley, dubbing it a “midlife glow-up”. He reveals he has lost weight to get ripped and had a hair and teeth makeover too.

James, 40, says: “People have used the words ‘midlife crisis’ or ‘a cry for help’ – I say ‘midlife glow-up’. “And it’s gone down extremely well ‘across the board’. I have never had more heat in my life, if you get my drift. It’s harder to go home on my own at the moment!

“I joke, of course. I am not that kind of guy – but if I was then it would almost be unfair.” James lifts the lid on single life, two years on from his marriage breakdown, in new book Reloaded – The Good, The Bad & The Rugby, a spin-off from the podcast he hosts with Mike Tindall and Alex Payne.

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The ex-England flanker, who won 77 caps for his country, says: “A lot has gone on since the last book we wrote, including me turning 40. I celebrated with a mad week in Ibiza, which was like a cross between The Hangover and the last days of Rome.

“Some people broke so hard that they felt the need to leave early. I’d wake up and see a note next to my bed – ‘Sorry can’t do this any more’.

“Turning 40 wasn’t at all depressing, it was non-stop laughter, exactly what I wanted. “Physically, I’m a strange mismatch between outwardly looking half-decent and crumbling underneath.

“I’ve had a bit of a mid-life glow-up … and I reckon I might even be a six out of 10.” He shed nearly three stone, going from 19st 5lb to 16st 12lb, after linking up with Roar Fitness, run by former British speed skater Sarah Lindsay.

James says: “I loved the torture of doing it, and it was the best shape I’d ever been in. I was absolutely shredded and looked almost like a bodybuilder, minus the severe bronze lacquer. I mean, I did get tanned – just not that insane tan they all get.” When he is not working – and not enjoying time with his and Chloe’s daughter, Bodhi, three – he ends “up wasting an enormous amount of time and money dating”.

He says: “I’ve never really been a fan of dating apps. I much prefer meeting people in person. There’s an art to chatting someone up, that mix of charm, nerves and risk.

“I actually enjoy the jeopardy of it: that little thrill of not knowing whether they’ll say yes, no, or completely shut you down.” Women, he says, “don’t quite realise just how nerve-racking it is”.

He goes on: “Most women never hit on men, so they’ll never know the feeling of walking up to a group, heart pounding, trying to deliver a line that isn’t terrible. Sometimes it lands, sometimes it crashes and burns and either way, it takes guts.”

James says he did try to get on to the so-called “celebrity” dating app Raya – but failed. He reveals: “After 97 referrals, I still couldn’t get in. I’ve no idea what I did wrong, but perhaps they’re simply excellent judges of character. It’s probably for the best that they’ve kept me out.

“The problem is, most of the time I date just to have something to do, and it can be quite soul-destroying.” Although the star says he has no intention of settling down with anybody any time soon.

He says: “I’ve pretty much conceded that my life needs to be slightly chaotic. But what that chaos will look like over the next few years is difficult to say.”

In 2023, he and Chloe – daughter of TV stars Richard Madeley and Judy Finnigan – announced their separation in a joint statement. They wed in 2018.

In his new book, James confesses crushing rugby injuries make it hard to keep up with his little girl. He says: “I struggle just to walk properly. I used to have good days and bad days, but now it’s just bad days. I’m due to have an operation… I can’t pick Bodhi up sometimes.”

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And he has said of the new book: “It’s a rollercoaster of emotion, fun, stories you have never heard. “Me, my world ’s falling apart but I am still smiling.”

Buttler, Archer & Salt retained but Livingstone released in IPL

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England’s Jos Buttler, Jofra Archer and Phil Salt have been retained by their Indian Premier League franchises for the 2026 season, but all-rounder Liam Livingstone has been released.

Buttler, who averaged 59.77 last year, has been retained by Gujarat Titans, while Salt stays at Royal Challengers Bengaluru after impressing with a strike-rate of 175.98 at the top of the order as they won the title for the first time.

Archer only took 11 wickets at 39.18 last year but his prolonged run of fitness since is enough for Rajasthan Royals to stick with him.

However, Livingstone has been let go by Bengaluru after a disappointing campaign. He only scored 112 in 10 innings and claimed two wickets at 38, with an economy rate of 8.44.

Jamie Overton (Chennai), Will Jacks (Mumbai), Jacob Bethell (Bengaluru) and Brydon Carse (Hyderabad) have all been retained.

Reece Topley and Moeen Ali have been released by Mumbai and Kolkata respectively.

All-rounder Sam Curran has moved from Chennai Super Kings to Rajasthan Royals as part of a blockbuster trade – with India all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja also making the move – in exchange for India batter Sanju Samson.

One England name not on the list is batter Harry Brook, who pulled out of the tournament for the second year in a row in 2025, leaving him at risk of a two-year suspension.

West Indies all-rounder Andre Russell has been released by Kolkata after 11 seasons while Australia’s Glenn Maxwell has been let go by Punjab, alongside compatriot Josh Inglis.

Adam Zampa (Hyderabad) and Jake Fraser-McGurk (Delhi) have also been released, as have New Zealand duo Devon Conway and Rachin Ravindra at Chennai.

David Miller (Lucknow), Anrich Nortje (Kolkata) and Lungi Ngidi (Bengaluru) are among eight South Africans released.

England players retained for IPL 2026

Chennai Super Kings: Jamie Overton

Gujarat Titans: Jos Buttler

Mumbai Indians: Will Jacks

Rajasthan Royals: Jofra Archer and Sam Curran (traded)

Royal Challengers Bengaluru: Phil Salt and Jacob Bethell

Selected India and overseas players retained for IPL 2026

Chennai Super Kings: MS Dhoni, Ruturaj Gaikwad, Sanju Samson (traded), Nathan Ellis, Noor Ahmad, Dewald Brevis

Delhi Capitals: Kuldeep Yadav, KL Rahul, Axar Patel, Tristan Stubbs, Mitchell Starc

Gujarat Titans: Shubman Gill, Mohammed Siraj, Washington Sundar, Rashid Khan, Kagiso Rabada, Glenn Phillips

Kolkata Knight Riders: Varun Chakaravarthy, Rovman Powell, Sunil Narine

Lucknow Super Giants: Rishabh Pant, Mohammed Shami (traded), Aiden Markram, Nicolas Pooran, Matthew Breetzke, Mitchell Marsh

Mumbai Indians: Suryakumar Yadav, Jasprit Bumrah, Hardik Pandya, Rohit Sharma, Tilak Varma, Shardul Thakur (traded), Mitchell Santner, Sherfane Rutherford (traded), Corbin Bosch, Trent Boult, Ryan Rickelton

Punjab Kings: Shreyas Iyer, Arshdeep Singh, Prabhsimran Singh, Mitch Owen, Azmatullah Omarzai, Lockie Ferguson, Xavier Bartlett, Marco Jansen, Marcus Stoinis

Rajasthan Royals: Yashasvi Jaiswal, Ravindra Jadeja (traded), Dhruv Jurel, Vaibhav Suryavanshi, Kwena Maphaka, Shimron Hetmyer, Lhuan-dre Pretorious, Nandre Burger

Royal Challengers Bengaluru: Virat Kohli, Rajat Patidar, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Tim David, Nuwan Thushara, Josh Hazlewood, Romario Shepherd

Selected players released before IPL 2026

Chennai Super Kings: Devon Conway, Rachin Ravindra, Deepak Hooda

Delhi Capitals: Faf du Plessis, Jake Fraser-McGurk

Gujarat Titans: Dasun Shanaka, Gerald Coetzee, Karim Janat

Kolkata Knight Riders: Andre Russell, Anrich Nortje, Moeen Ali, Quinton de Kock, Rahmanullah Gurbaz, Spencer Johnson, Venkatesh Iyer

Lucknow Super Giants: David Miller, Ravi Bishnoi, Akash Deep, Shamar Joseph

Mumbai Indians: Bevon Jacobs, Karn Sharma, Lizaad Williams, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Reece Topley

Punjab Kings: Glenn Maxwell, Josh Inglis, Aaron Hardie, Kyle Jamieson

Rajasthan Royals: Fazalhaq Farooqi, Maheesh Theekshana, Wanindu Hasaranga

Royal Challengers Bengaluru: Liam Livingstone, Lungi Ngidi, Mayank Agarwal

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    • 16 August
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Strictly bosses refuse to back down as Vicky Pattison issues complaint

Strictly Come Dancing front-runner Vicky Pattison isn’t keen on a recent rule-change but, she says, BBC bosses are ‘really behind it as a format and it ‘isn’t going anywhere’

Bosses on Strictly Come Dancing have produced a change to the format this year. But Vicky Pattison, who has been going from strength to strength in the competition isn’t too happy about the most recent change.

In earlier series of Strictly, the couples were divided into two groups, with each one containing a pair who were in the dance off.

But this year, there’s an announcement on the Sunday episode for all the couples who are safe, while the “final four” wait to hear their fate in the second announcement.

On her Get a Grip podcast, Vicky and pal Angela Scanlon had a very mixed view of the rule change, saying felt “vicious” and “awful”, but also accepting that it might help to “level the playing field” for contestants.

Vicky added that she had gone to Strictly bosses with her objections: “I’ve sort of expressed how spicy I think it is. They’re really behind it as a format. It isn’t going anywhere.”

Angela replied that she did understand the reasoning behind the rule change:

“With the dance off, what you end up having is the first cohort that are through and the one person who gets potentially an hour, depending on the run of the show, to get their head around being in the dance off, to have a little run through, to like get themselves in the game.

“And then you have the second cohort. So the second person revealed in the dance off is literally like a slap in the face and then get out there and do it.

“It’s very difficult. So this evens the playing field a little bit for the people who are in the dance off.”

Vicky, alongside her professional dance partner Kai Widdrington, was nowhere near the danger zone last week, but says it’s inevitable that she’ll have to face the “awful” ordeal at some point: “I know at some point, you know, I’ll have to be in a dance off or whatever it is. I think it’ll be it’ll be terrifying.

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“It will just be awful, she added. “As we all know, I don’t, deal with nerves very well or pressure. So I’m not looking forward to it.”

Sinner keen to cap ‘amazing week’ with ATP Finals title

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Defending champion Jannik Sinner will try to sign off in style in his last outing of the season after overcoming Alex de Minaur to reach the ATP Finals title match, where he could face Carlos Alcaraz.

In a match of contrasting sets, the Italian world number two was frustrated by a battling performance from De Minaur during a 66-minute opener but blew away the Australian in the second to win 7-5 6-2 and reach his third consecutive final in Turin.

Sinner, who extended his unbeaten run on indoor hard courts to 30 matches, has not dropped a set at the end-of-season showpiece since losing to Novak Djokovic in the 2023 final.

Such has been his form, he has yet to drop a service game at this year’s tournament.

He will face either year-end number one Alcaraz or Canada’s Felix Auger-Aliassime in Sunday’s final as he bids to become only the fourth player to defend the men’s singles title this century, after Lleyton Hewitt, Roger Federer and Djokovic.

“I’m very happy. This is the last event of the year, so it’s great to finish this way,” Sinner said.

“It was a very tough match, especially the beginning of the first set. He was serving great. In the second, I tried to be aggressive which worked well.

Alex de Minaur waves to the crowd as he is beaten at the ATP FinalsGetty Images

The “amazing week” for Sinner comes at the end of a rollercoaster year.

On court, the 24-year-old has enjoyed his second-best season to date in terms of titles, winning five tournaments including a successful Australian Open defence and a maiden Wimbledon crown.

Such performances have come against a background of the three-month doping ban which he accepted in February following two positive drug tests in 2024.

It was accepted that Sinner did not intend to cheat, but the short ban led to a backlash from some fellow players.

In front of a home crowd on Saturday, there were only cheers as he produced yet another relentless display of serving.

After staving off three break points in a rust opening service game, Sinner only conceded a further four points on serve in the first set.

However, he was forced to work for his breakthrough against a resilient De Minaur, who produced a number of big first serves and several moments of inspired scrambled defence on the baseline which earned the applause of the largely partisan Italian crowd.

Such gutsy tennis helped De Minaur escape unscathed from four service games that went to deuce.

The Australian’s resistance was eventually broken in the 11th game – Sinner converting his eighth break point of the match – and from there, the home favourite put on an exhibition.

A run of seven consecutive games saw him clinch the first set and race into a 4-0 lead in the next, before converting his second match point to close out the win.

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Patten run to doubles final guarantees British champion

There was no British involvement in the singles this year, but a British champion is guaranteed in the doubles.

Essex’s Henry Patten and Finland’s Harri Heliovaara beat the all-Italian pair of Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori 6-4 6-3 in the first semi-final on Saturday.

The result continues a successful year for former Wimbledon champions Patten and Heliovaara, who won the Australian Open in January for their second Grand Slam title and have added titles in Beijing and Paris.

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    • 16 August
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Thousands march for climate action outside COP30 summit in Brazil

Thousands of people have marched through the streets of the Brazilian city of Belem, calling for the voices of Indigenous peoples and environmental defenders to be heard at the United Nations COP30 climate summit.

Indigenous community members mixed with activists at Saturday’s march, which unfolded in a festive atmosphere as participants carried a giant beach ball representing the Earth and a Brazilian flag emblazoned with the words “Protected Amazon”.

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It was the first major protest outside the conference, which began earlier this week in Belem, bringing together world leaders, activists and experts in a push to tackle the worsening climate crisis.

Indigenous activists previously stormed the summit, disrupting the proceedings as they demanded that Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva take concrete action to ensure their territories are protected from growing threats.

Amnesty International warned in a recent report that billions of people around the world are threatened by the expansion of fossil fuel projects, such as oil-and-gas pipelines and coal mines.

Indigenous communities, in particular, sit on the front lines of much of this development, the rights group said.

People hold a giant Brazilian flag reading ‘Protected Amazon’ during the march [AFP]

Naga Munchetty facing ‘formal investigation’ over BBC Breakfast ‘bullying’ claims

Naga Munchetty is reportedly facing a formal investigation following allegations of ‘bullying’ behind the scenes on BBC Breakfast, as her future on the programme remains in doubt

Naga Munchetty is facing a formal investigation by the BBC, according to reports. The presenter has been accused of bullying behind the scenes on BBC B and will now be fully investigated.

In recent months, the programme has been surrounded by allegations of being a toxic workplace, with a string of claims made against Naga, who also presents on BBC Radio 5 Live. The allegations surrounding the 50-year-old were previously “under review,” but last week, this was escalated.

Sources claim that Naga’s position on the programme may now be in doubt following the departure of Deborah Turness, who was Head of News until she stepped down amidst the Donald Trump speech furore. Deborah had allegedly “protected” members of the talent team, including Naga.

“The Naga situation has been an albatross around Breakfast’s neck since June, when the endemic bullying at MediaCity was first exposed by The Sun,” a source told The Sun. They added: “Whilst others have been cleared, the review on Naga has done the opposite — with further complaints against her.

“They had no choice but to take things from the slightly softer ‘under review’ to formal investigation.” BBC News claims that an HR adviser from PwC is helping the corporation, looking into the culture of the show.

Tim Davie, who has since resigned as BBC director-general, and BBC board chairman Samir Shah vowed in April to “draw a line in the sand” after an independent review found some “well-known names” were “not being held to account for poor behaviour”.

The workplace culture review, led by management consultant Grahame Russell from Change Associates, was launched in the wake of the furore over disgraced former newsreader Huw Edwards.

Allegations relating to Naga vary from allegedly hitting out at an intern for spreading Marmite on her toast incorrectly, and making an unwanted sexual remark to a female colleague.

Naga also allegedly hit out, claiming her porridge was “too hot” and she wasn’t a fan of blueberries, which had been used as a topping. BBC Breakfast boss Richard Frediani had also faced accusations of bullying before Naga and her co-anchor, Charlie Stayt, faced claims. The complaints about Frediani were not upheld. Stayt is said to remain “under review”.

Sources have claimed that Deborah and former Director General Tim Davie had “pandered” to some talent. The source went on to claim that people had allegedly been “protected” by Davie and Turness but may now be “fearful” for their future at the license-fee-funded corporation.

Naga earns between £355,000 and £359,000 for her role on the early morning news programme. Her pay band has increased over the last year, as she previously earned between £345,000 to £355,000.

However, her co-anchor, Charlie, who has been on the show since 2014, is paid within the £190,000 salary bracket, half of what Naga earns for the show.

But her team are said to be approaching competitors for a new role. These are said to include LBC and Sky News, with Naga open to new opportunities.

Complaints against Naga were sent via the BBC’s Call It Out Scheme, which was launched after the scandal surrounding former MasterChef stars Gregg Wallace and John Torode.

On Friday, a BBC spokesperson told the Mirror: “We do not comment on individual HR matters.”

The Mirror has approached representatives for Naga Munchetty.

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