Colby Parkinson scores a touchdown with 38 seconds remaining as the Los Angeles Rams leave it late to beat the Carolina Panthers 34-31 to avoid a play-off upset.
WATCH MORE: Bears win first play-off game in over 15 years in comeback thriller

Colby Parkinson scores a touchdown with 38 seconds remaining as the Los Angeles Rams leave it late to beat the Carolina Panthers 34-31 to avoid a play-off upset.
WATCH MORE: Bears win first play-off game in over 15 years in comeback thriller

Colby Parkinson scores a touchdown with 38 seconds remaining as the Los Angeles Rams leave it late to beat the Carolina Panthers 34-31 to avoid a play-off upset.
WATCH MORE: Bears win first play-off game in over 15 years in comeback thriller

Colby Parkinson scores a touchdown with 38 seconds remaining as the Los Angeles Rams leave it late to beat the Carolina Panthers 34-31 to avoid a play-off upset.
WATCH MORE: Bears win first play-off game in over 15 years in comeback thriller

Eilish McColgan set a new women’s European 10km record in Valencia – just seven days after her previous record was broken by Belgian Jana van Lent.
The 35-year-old Briton knocked three seconds off Van Lent’s time by winning the Valencia Ibercaja on Sunday in a time of 30 minutes seven seconds.
McColgan held the record for more than three years after setting a time of 30:19 in Manchester in 2022, but that was lowered to 30:10 by Van Lent in Nice on 4 January.
Before that, GB’s Paula Radcliffe held the women’s record for almost 20 years, after running a time of 30:21 in Puerto Rico in February 2003.
Sweden’s Andreas Almgren also set a new European record of 26:43 in winning the men’s event in Valencia, beating his own previous best time, which was set on the same course, by nine seconds.

Aryna Sabalenka prepared for the Australian Open with a comfortable victory over Marta Kostyuk to win a third Brisbane International title.
The world number one took control of Sunday’s final by reeling off five consecutive games from 4-4 in the opening set, taking just 79 minutes to win 6-4 6-3.
Sabalenka defended her crown at the Queensland Tennis Centre, where she also won the title in 2023.
“Every day you go out there and prove your level, and I think this week I did it really well,” said Sabalenka, who did not drop a set in the tournament.
Looking ahead to the Australian Open, she said: “The only thing I know is that I’ll be there, I’ll be fighting.”
Salablenka lost in the Melbourne Park final last year to Madison Keys, having been champion in 2023 and 2024.
“I’ll do my best to go as far as possible,” she added. “And do a little bit better than last year. That’s my focus.”
Kostyuk, who had not won a set in four previous defeats by Sabalenka, settled herself after cancelling out an early break of serve, but lost her serve again in the 10th game as her opponent stepped up her intensity to win the first set.
The 16th seed was aiming for just a second WTA singles title in what was her first final in two years and fourth in total, but her game crumbled under the weight of Sabalenka’s groundstrokes.
One break of serve at the start of the second set proved enough for Sabalenka to see off the world number 26 as Kostyuk fired into the net on her first championship point.
Kostyuk struggled to hold back tears as she spoke to the Brisbane crowd about conditions at home in Ukraine, where officials have been battling to repair heating and water supplies damaged by Russian bombing.
“I want to say a few words about Ukraine,” she said. “I play every day with a pain in my heart. There are thousands of people who are without light and warm water right now. It’s minus 20 degrees outside so it’s very, very painful to live this reality every day.
“It’s very hot in Brisbane so it’s difficult to imagine, you know, but my sister is sleeping under three blankets because of how cold it is at home.”
Sabalenka’s 22nd WTA title is her first since claiming a fourth Grand Slam at the US Open in September.
Meanwhile, Great Britain’s world number two Alfie Hewett needed just 65 minutes to beat Spanish second seed Martin de la Puente 6-1 6-3 in the men’s wheelchair singles final.



Another Ashes series in Australia has come and gone, meaning England’s wait for a win down under goes on.
By the time the next series against Australia starts in summer 2027 it will be 12 years since England last won the urn.
Moments of cheer – Jacob Bethell’s first Test century, Josh Tongue’s efforts and Joe Root’s long-awaited Australian ton – were few and far between, leaving plenty of questions over the future.
As it stands, it appears the wish to change England’s leadership, one unafraid of picking youngsters, is limited. If so, do not expect sweeping changes in playing personnel.
England’s next big hope?
Aged 21 years and 114 days, Somerset’s James Rew became the youngest Englishman to score 10 first-class hundreds last year and was given a first England call-up soon after for the Test against Zimbabwe though he did not play.
Some say his 18-year-old brother Thomas, who scored England Under-19s’ fastest 50-over century last June, is even more talented.
Both were part of the England Lions squad that toured Australia this winter.
James made 92 not out against a Prime Ministers’ XI in the Lions’ day-night match in Canberra.
Thomas scored 55 against England in their Lilac Hill warm-up before the first Test, and 47 in a thrashing at the hands of a strong Australia A in Brisbane.
Both could become options as top-six batters, or apply pressure to wicketkeeper Jamie Smith should his slump continue.
It should not be forgotten Thomas, who will lead England Under-19s at their World Cup later this month, is still yet to play a first-class match for Somerset.

Other than Root and Bethell, the only player to make a century in an England shirt this winter was 21-year-old Asa Tribe – the Glamorgan right-hander who has also played international cricket for Jersey.
Tribe, who scored 129 not out against the Australia A attack that featured five full internationals, is making a name for himself with a rapid rise.
He was still playing university cricket for Cardiff last year but earned a spot on the Lions tour with a run for Glamorgan that included three straight 50-over centuries, two more fifties and was followed by a double hundred in the County Championship.
Currently at the SA20 after being picked up by Paarl Royals, Tribe will get a shot at Division One of the County Championship next season after Glamorgan’s promotion.

The Rews are not the only brothers it is hoped will have big futures.
Rehan Ahmed was the youngest man to play Test cricket for England when he featured in Pakistan in 2022, while his 17-year-old brother Farhan, an off-spinner rather than leggie like Rehan, became the youngest bowler to take a five-wicket haul in first-class cricket in Britain when taking seven for Nottinghamshire against Surrey in 2024.
Rehan was another on this winter’s Lions trip. Many thought he should have been in the full Test squad after a strong season for Leicestershire.
Farhan has played for the Lions this year and will be part of the Under-19 World Cup group.
After Shoaib Bashir’s tour as drinks carrier, England appear back at square one in their search for a frontline spinner.
Having scored five centuries and taken 23 wickets in the 2025 County Championship Division Two, it may be that Rehan’s future is more as an all-rounder.
Lancashire left-arm spinner Tom Hartley, who has not added to his five Test caps since the 2024 tour of India, was with the Lions in Australia, and do not forget Somerset’s Jack Leach.
This is perhaps the most worrying area, given the struggles in Australia.
England picked a relatively inexperienced pace attack for the Ashes and only Josh Tongue and Jofra Archer emerged with their reputations enhanced. Those further down the analysts’ ‘depth charts’ have even less experience.
Leicestershire’s 21-year-old left-armer Josh Hull, brought in from relative obscurity for one Test in 2024, Hampshire’s Eddie Jack, 20, and Warwickshire recruit Nathan Gilchrist, 25, are part of the group below the Test side the current management are trying to develop.
There is also Sonny Baker, for whom a Test call-up appeared possible before a one-day international debut that returned figures of 0-76 and a subsequent injury, and Matthew Fisher.
Fisher, 28, was with England from the third Ashes Test after Mark Wood’s injury. Despite injury issues of his own, he at least has experience built from 10 years on the county scene at Yorkshire and more recently Surrey, while his sole Test cap came against West Indies in 2022.
But what if England’s Ashes defeat forces them to change course – to look more often from the county scene?
There could, of course, be a change in management entirely, which may result in the net being cast wider.
Sussex seamer Ollie Robinson, 32, said this week he is keen to add to his 20 Test caps, having been set aside by the current regime.
At his best, he is undoubtedly one of England’s most skillful seamers but his fitness and reliability remains a concern.
Openers Dom Sibley, 30, and Haseeb Hameed, still only 28, were the leading scorers in last year’s County Championship. Neither have played a Test in the Bazball era.
Yorkshire seamer George Hill took 51 wickets at 16.72 last summer, though does not bowl at a pace currently fancied.
