Watch as Carlos Alcaraz transforms defense into attack when he scurried across the court to lob Jiri Lehecka for a point in the 2025 Queen’s final.
Watch more: Alcaraz defeats Lahecka in the thrilling Queen’s final highlights
Watch as Carlos Alcaraz transforms defense into attack when he scurried across the court to lob Jiri Lehecka for a point in the 2025 Queen’s final.
Watch more: Alcaraz defeats Lahecka in the thrilling Queen’s final highlights
Love Island Australia ‘s Matt Zukowski has split with his fitness influencer wife Tammy Hembrow just seven months after they got married. The couple got engaged in December 2023 after three months of dating, before tying the knot in November 2024.
Their family and friends surrounded the couple as their ceremony took place at Byron Bay’s Chateau Du Soleil. Tammy, 31, shares her ex-boyfriend Reece Hawkins’ eight children with her, Wolf, 10 and Saskia, eight. She and former partner Matt Poole also have a three-year-old daughter named Posy.
She addressed her split from Matt, 29, on TikTok, saying she didn’t want to go into too much detail. Speaking to her followers, Tammy said: “This is giving me so much anxiety … I wanted to finally tell you guys that I am going to be getting a divorce.”
Do you believe this was going to happen, Tammy continued? Is this something I should have? No. You marry someone if you believe it will last forever, it’s obvious. And, to be honest, I blame myself alone.
The influencer expressed a clear sense of tear as she explained, “I feel like I’ve made not the best relationships decisions. And I think I’m really good at wearing rose-colored glasses or just getting sucked into it all.
Confirming the news, former Love Island star Matt shared a heartfelt post on his story. He wrote: “It’s with a heavy heart I share that Tammy and I have decided to separate. Both of us have struggled with making this decision however we need to do what is right for ourselves and her three children.
We didn’t take this decision lightly, they said. Our time together will always be valued and never forgotten. We appreciate everyone’s assistance and space at this moment as we navigate the split, Matt concluded.
Fans have been making speculating about Tammy’s marriage after she was spotted crying in a public toilet in March. Later, Matthew allegedly overheard him talking inappropriately about his wife at a Melbourne gym.
Additionally, it’s been said that Matt left the couple’s Queensland home and relocated back to Melbourne where he worked for his father’s business. He also carried his book, Where’s Your Head? a guest appearance on the program with Anna McEvoy, who previously competed on Love Island.
Matt missed several occasions in recent months, including Posy’s third birthday party and Tammy’s 31st birthday celebration. Tammy had been sharing a number of cryptic social media posts, including a TikTok post that read, “When something feels off, it is usually women’s intuition.
In an interview last year with Stellar magazine, mum-of-three Tammy hit back at critics of her whirlwind relationship. She told the publication: “When people say, ‘Oh, you’re introducing your kids to another man’, I get where they’re coming from. But I’m not doing this lightly.”
She continued, “Blended families can be amazing, and my goal is to always get along with my exes. I always take my kids’ best interest at heart.
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Rylan Clark says BBC bosses “won’t listen” as he questioned a “decision” made by the broadcaster. The 36-year-old has been presenting his Saturday afternoon slot on BBC Radio 2 since 2019. He replaced presenter Zoe Ball when she moved to the station’s coveted breakfast slot.
Scott Mills has since replaced Zoe, 54, with whom she left the show. However, Ryan maintains a national broadcast presence and is the host of a number of BBC podcasts.
He did, however, say that he thinks he would make a great addition to the station. Despite making fun of the fact that he had to apologize to BBC bosses, he still racked up the sneer.
He made the revelation over the weekend when he showed off his geography prowess. Sally Boazman, a traffic presenter, inquired during the bulletin: “Is there a portion of the A13 Stanford-Le-Hope bypass that is eastbound and a place called Fobbing?” Is there a place called “Fobbing”?
Rylan, an Essex boy, said, “Yeah, it’s basically the Basildon turn-off.” It’s a small village on the outskirts of Corringham, he continued.
Sally responded, “You should do the traffic, shouldn’t you?” which Rylan made a joke about: “I should. They won’t listen to what I’ve been saying for years.
Before working in radio, Rylan rose to fame when he appeared on the X Factor in 2012. He was eliminated in the quarter final as James Arthur went on to win the competition.
Just weeks later however, Rylan was whisked away to the Celebrity Big Brother house. He won over the nation and was crowned the winner, ahead of reality stars Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag.
He later went on to work as a reporter on This Morning as well as presenting Big Brother’s Bit on the Side. Since 2018 he has commentated on the semi-finals of Eurovision alongside fellow Radio 2 star Scott.
For his documentary Rob and Rylan’s Grand Tour, which included Rob Rinder and him traveling around Italy, Rylan won a BAFTA earlier this year. After separating from his ex-husband Dan Neal in 2021, Ryan described the show as “two gay guys going through a divorce,” while Rob and his own husband are still together.
Speaking to the Mirror and other press, Rylan said: “The show, it happened at a really weird time for me. I wasn’t fully over some of the breakdown of my marriage and stuff like that. I was flung with a judge. It was the best therapy I needed.
From the moment we meet and how raw I was then, I detest that word in television. With cameras nearby, it was like being an adolescent once and starting over.
“Everyone who worked on the show gave the show its exact appearance.” They made no effort to improve the appearance.
Iran claims that US President Donald Trump has “betrayed” American voters by accepting Israel’s demands and will be “solely and fully responsible” for the “dangerous consequences” of its attacks on Iranian nuclear sites.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the US “broke a very big red line” by attacking Iran’s three nuclear facilities at an Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) meeting on Sunday in Istanbul.
Araghchi criticized the strikes and demanded action from the UN Security Council shortly after Trump announced that US warplanes had “obliterated” the nuclear sites.
The “warmongering and lawless” US administration will be “solely and fully responsible for the dangerous consequences and far-reaching implications of its act of aggression,” he said, adding that it “is an outrageous, grave, and unprecedented violation of fundamental principles of the United Nations Charter and international law.”
The US military’s “hostility toward the peace-seeking people of Iran” has once more been demonstrated by the level of hostility the United States has toward one of its members, who were working with the genocidal Israeli regime. He declared that we would never compromise their right to selfdetermination and sovereignty.
The Islamic Republic of Iran continues to use all means of resistance against Israeli regime’s reckless and unlawful actions, including US military aggression.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised Trump’s “bold decision” to attack Iran’s nuclear sites and said Israel and the US acted in “full coordination,” escalating the Middle East conflict by starting strikes on Iran on June 13.
Trump stated following the strikes that Iran “must now consent to end this war” and that it must not be allowed to have nuclear weapons.
However, Araghchi argued that any call for a return to the country’s nuclear negotiations was “irrelevant.” Before Israel launched a surprise strike on Iran earlier this month, which the US publicly supported, the US and Iran were in nuclear talks.
Iran refutes Israeli claims that it is secretly developing nuclear weapons, saying that its uranium enrichment program is only for civilian purposes. Netanyahu has stated that he will continue the attacks “as many days as necessary” to stop Iran from developing a “nuclear threat.”
The United States betrayed diplomacy by supporting the genocidal Israeli regime’s launch of an illegal war of aggression against Iran, according to Araghchi.
“We were diplomatically engaged, but we were attacked.” Israelis were given the option of attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities if they were not given permission to do so. They have shown that they only comprehend the language of threat and force and are not diplomatic men.
Pete Hegseth, the US’s defense secretary, expressed his hope for Iran’s return to the table on Sunday.
He told reporters, “I can only confirm that there are Iranians receiving public and private messages through a variety of channels, giving them every opportunity to speak up.”
Araghchi also charged Trump with betraying both his own supporters and Iran. He claimed that Trump was elected with the intention of ending “America’s costly involvement in “forever wars.”
He betrayed Iran by abusing our commitment to diplomacy as well as deceiving his own voters by accepting the wishes of a wanted war criminal who has grown accustomed to using American citizens’ lives and wealth to advance the Israeli regime’s goals, according to Araghchi, referring to Netanyahu.
Since Israel’s June 13 attacks began, Iran claims that more than 400 people have died and at least 3, 056 have been injured. At least 24 people have died as a result of Iranian strikes in Israel.
In response to the unprecedented US strikes, Araghchi announced that he would travel to Moscow later on Sunday and hold “serious consultations” with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday morning.
He stated in Istanbul that “Russia and Iran are friends and we share a strategic partnership.” We “always consult with each other and coordinate our positions.”
In addition, Iran’s UN delegation officially requested that the UN Security Council hold an urgent meeting on Sunday to discuss the US strikes. The Iranian delegation urged “immediate action and the adoption of necessary measures under the framework of the United Nations Charter” in a letter sent to the council and distributed by Fars News Agency.
Iran, Iran – Iranians both inside and outside the nation have closely monitored and responded to the country’s rapidly advancing events since Donald Trump’s administration ordered the bombing of Iran’s top nuclear sites in response to the country’s ongoing conflict with Israel.
Iran’s three main nuclear sites, Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan, were hit early on Sunday by US bunker-buster bombs dropped from B-2 Spirit strategic bombers and Tomahawk cruise missile launches launched from naval platforms. Trump claimed that nuclear facilities had been “totally destroyed,” despite the lack of proof to date.
After a few hours, Iranian authorities confirmed the strikes, but said there was no radioactive leak. Additionally, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) verified that the site had not been contaminated off-site.
The government-run IRNA reported from a location close to Fordow, the most significant and difficult-to-reach nuclear site, that there was only a small amount of smoke rising from the area where air defenses were believed to be stationed and that there was no significant activity from emergency responders.
The massive GBU-57 bombs are thought to have burrowed deep underground before detonating in an effort to destroy Iranian nuclear installations dug beneath the mountains, according to satellite images that surfaced on Sunday.
According to Pir Hossein Kolivand, the head of Iran’s Red Crescent Society, no one has died as a result of US strikes.
In what appeared to be an Iranian advance on the destruction of the stored materials and equipment stored at the protected site in anticipation of US strikes, images also showed significant movement of trucks and bulldozers around Fordow in the days leading up to the strikes.
In a move to limit the damage from incoming bombs, heavy machinery also appeared to have been used to fill the facility’s entrance tunnels with earth.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi made the observation that a military response from Tehran is unavoidable while speaking in Turkiye’s Istanbul while attending an OIC meeting.
He told reporters, “My country has been invaded, and we must respond.” We must show patience and a reasonable response to these aggressions. We will only make decisions regarding diplomatic options and the possibility of restarting negotiations if these measures are put in place.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s Supreme Leader, warned in a televised message last week that a direct entry into the conflict would hurt Washington.
Its losses will be much greater than Iran’s potential harm, it will suffer. If the US engages in this conflict militarily, he said, “the harm the US will suffer will undoubtedly be irreparable.”
Following the US strikes, Iranian state media and a large number of hardline politicians reacted furiously.
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Iraq, which are within easy reach of Iranian missiles, were shown on a map of US military installations across the region on state television’s Channel 3.
“It is now more obvious than ever that all US citizens and military personnel are legitimate targets, not just for the Iranian nation but for the entire people of the region,” said the statement. You chose to spill the blood of your soldiers while we were negotiating and making progress in a diplomatic manner. According to Mehdi Khanalizadeh, the channel’s anchor, the US president has chosen to deliver the coffins of up to 50 000 US soldiers in Washington.
Amirhossein Tahmasebi, a different anchor who had earlier defiant video broadcast from the state television IRIB buildings in northern Tehran after they were bombed by Israel last week, alleged that he “spits” on Trump and those who claim to be president of peace.
The ultraconservative head of the Bahraini newspaper, Hossein Shariatmadari, wrote: “It is now our turn to immediately rain missiles down on the US naval force in Bahrain as a first measure.”
He also reiterated his long-awaited request for Iran to close the strategic Strait of Hormuz, and stated that the country must block access to ships from the US, the UK, France, and Germany.
One of Iran’s parliamentarians, Hamid Rasaei, who is close to the Paydari (Steadfastness) faction led by security council member and unsuccessful presidential candidate Saeed Jalili, went one step further and demanded that Iran attack US bases in Saudi Arabia.
However, in recent years, Tehran and Riyadh’s relations have significantly thawed.
The majority of Iranians are still unable to access the internet because of state-imposed internet restrictions, but those who have managed to locate a functioning proxy are also furious about the conflict.
In terms of the nuclear sites, one user wrote on X, “Thirty years of Iranian oil money and thirty years of economic opportunities that could have transformed tens of millions of people into citizens like the rest of the world have turned into three deep pits.”
Another user sarcastically wrote, “Trump says let me just drop the heaviest bomb in the world and then it will all be about peace.”
Asghar Farhadi, the two-time Oscar-winning director, posted a picture of Mount Damavand, the country’s highest peak at 5, 609 metres (18, 402 feet), captioned “Stalwart like Damavand, to the last breath for Iran.”
However, some Iranians who live abroad and are opposed to the country’s ruling theocracy, along with some who live there, were against the US and Israeli attacks in the belief that they might lead to the ouster of the ruling party.
Iranian authorities and the state media have been denounced and even threatened by this, as a result.
The state views those who support Israel and the US as “dishonorable opposition” who are “selling out their own country,” according to Elias Hazrati, the head of President Masoud Pezeshkian’s communications council, in a late-night state television interview on Saturday.
Iran’s Supreme National Security Council said those who willingly or unwillingly collaborated with Israel must turn themselves in by Sunday to avoid “the harshest punishment as fifth column and colluders with a hostile country during wartime,” according to a statement released on Friday.
In a Nottingham Open final marred by heavy rain, McCartney Kessler defeated Dayana Yastremska to claim her first grass-court WTA Tour title.
When the covers were pulled across the court, the American, 25, was about to break and lead the first set, 5-4.
After a lengthy delay, Kessler returned to where she left off as she wrapped up the opening set before taking a break in the seventh game that gave the impression that she was on her way to victory.
However, Yastremska from Ukraine, who is chasing her first WTA title since 2019, held off, saving five match points before breaking Kessler’s serve to bring the match level.
However, Kessler kept her composure until she could regain the lead, breaking Yastremska once more before serving to win the title.