Archive July 2, 2025

Talking points as Lions Test team begins to take shape

Getty Images
  • 111 Comments

Fans gathered from mid-afternoon in the pubs of Caxton Street close to the Suncorp Stadium, familiar accents at every turn, reminders of home.

Long after the Lions had put away the Queensland Reds 52-12 – notching up eight tries and a half century of points for the second game in succession – these same fans were back where they started, with an eyeful of rugby and a skinful of pints. Lions jerseys everywhere. The first real stirrings of a proper red army in the land of the green and the gold.

Two games played in Australia and three played in total and we’re beginning to see a picture forming; not complete, but with more detail than before, some players coming up in rich colour and others beginning to fade to grey as the Lions build towards the first Test at the same stadium on 19 July.

Elliot Daly runs with the ballGetty Images

The curious situation at full-back

A statistic did the rounds during the week, inspired by rugby statinator @topofthemoonGW, that fairly knocked everyone to the ground. Elliot Daly had featured in 10 Lions matchday squads in a row before his run ‘ended’ in Brisbane against the Reds.

Only it hadn’t. Hugo Keenan dropped out through illness and Daly stepped back in to make it 11 in a row. It’s a number that would have had the old boys saluting him, the Lions of the late 1800s and early 1900s who ran themselves into the ground in so many games that half of them lost about two inches off their trouser leg.

We’re now back to where we were this time last week, sweating on an injured Lion. Tomos Williams had to go home, cut down in peak form, and the hope is that Daly, playing fantastically, doesn’t suffer the same fate after going off in the second half. As sporting heartbreak goes, it would be beyond cruel.

What a strange situation at full-back now. Not a crisis by any means, but curious. Daly is nursing an injury to his arm, Keenan hasn’t played since the end of May and Blair Kinghorn only just landed in the country the other day.

Head coach Andy Farrell was asked if he was worried. “No, we’ve lots of full-backs,” he said.

And he’s right. Kinghorn and Keenan will get up to speed soon enough and, in reserve, he has Marcus Smith (admittedly not everyone’s cup of tea at 15, but an option) and the versatility of Huw Jones who revived his international career when playing well at full-back for half a season with Harlequins before returning to Glasgow.

Maro Itoje runs with the ballGetty Images

Itoje’s timely reminder of his excellence

Lions captain Maro Itoje was asked on Monday about the high number of minutes he has played this season for club and country and whether he felt tired at all.

On the contrary, he said. He felt revived and energised by the Lions around him – and in Brisbane he proved it. One try, 10 carries, 18 tackles – he was an absolute pest just as soon as the Lions settled down after their initial ropey period.

He wasn’t so hot against the Pumas but this was Maro beginning to crank through the gears.

“I think the whole point of these tours is you’re with great players, and you see great players performing well, and it gives you extra motivation to perform well,” he said, later.

Can Freeman break up the Irish wing duopoly?

When Farrell singled out Mack Hansen for praise after the Western Force game last weekend, Freeman might have gulped hard. The coach of Ireland bigging up an Ireland wing?

It can’t have been easy listening for Tommy Freeman or for Duhan van der Merwe as they attempt to break up the Irish pair for the Test team.

Van der Merwe, a sensational broken field runner, has lost too much ground on the other three at this point. He was good and bad on Wednesday, but he’s clearly fourth of the four wings. His game just didn’t fit with what Farrell wants from his wings.

Farrell seeking clarity on some scrum calls

In their two games in Australia the Lions have encountered some bumps on the road – desperation and a high penalty count in the first half in Perth, some restart issues, a few unconvincing scrums – but they’re clever players and capable of coming up with solutions on the hoof.

The scrum was penalised too often for comfort in Brisbane. It didn’t cost them, but the Lions don’t want to get a reputation for being ill-disciplined.

“I think we’ll look back on some of the decisions and get some clarity on a few,” said Farrell. “I suppose that’s how it always is, isn’t it? It’s hard to referee at the best of times. But I obviously know that we’ve got a world-class front row. “

When you hear a coach saying that he will seek “clarity” on scrum interpretation it normally means he didn’t agree with the interpretation. There was a strange kind of spikiness around this one.

“I’m saying we need some clarity on bits, because that’s what you’d always want to do, so you can fix things if you need to fix them,” he said.

Jac Morgan scored the Lions' fifth tryGetty Images

Lions Test squad begins to crystallise

Jac Morgan needed a big game – and he delivered. His energy levels were tremendous, his aggression in the tackle, his subtle touches and, of course, his try were of the highest quality.

Morgan rose up the ranks while Tom Curry fell down. He has lost his mojo at the wrong time. Close to a Test certainty during the season, Curry will now be lucky if he makes the 23. It’s all beginning to look very cut-throat.

Will Stuart had a chance to propel himself into the box-seat at tighthead but he got done in defence and gave away three penalties. It wasn’t the audition he wanted.

Against all odds, Finlay Bealham, not even in the original squad, might just be favourite for a Test spot because the great Tadhg Furlong still hasn’t stirred in the way Furlong can.

Offering up sweet thoughts for Daly’s fitness, there’s a Test 23 beginning to emerge through the fog of uncertainty. Skin and hair will fly in protest, but…

Kinghorn (Daly), Hansen, Ringrose, Tuipulotu, Lowe, Russell (F Smith), Gibson-Park (Mitchell); Genge (Schoeman), Sheehan (Cowan-Dickie), Bealham (Furlong), Itoje, McCarthy, Chessum (Beirne), Van der Flier, Conan (Pollock)

Such is the nature of this trek what happened in Brisbane will be an after-thought later on Thursday when Farrell names the team to face the Waratahs. So much build-up and yet the Lions have to move on from it in a relative instant.

Related topics

  • British & Irish Lions
  • Rugby Union

Fluminense vs Al Hilal: FIFA Club World Cup – teams, start time, lineups

Who: Fluminense vs Al Hilal

What: FIFA Club World Cup 2025
Where: Camping World Stadium, Orlando, United States
When: Friday, July 4 at 3pm (19:00 GMT)

How to follow: We’ll have all the build-up on Al Jazeera Sport from 12pm local (16:00 GMT) in advance of our live text commentary stream.

The first of the FIFA Club World Cup quarterfinals gets under way with the meeting of two mighty continents as South American giants Fluminense take on Asian powerhouse Al Hilal.

As successful as both sides have been in their own continents, however, their appearance in the last eight has come courtesy of both upsetting the odds – and in particular European super clubs – to reach this stage.

Al Jazeera Sport takes a look at the first of the quarterfinals as FIFA’s billion-dollar tournament closes towards its finale.

How did Fluminense reach the quarterfinals?

Fluminense finished second in Group H behind Borussia Dortmund with a win against Ulsan and draws against the German table toppers and Mamelodi Sundowns of South Africa.

That set up a round-of-16 meeting with defeated Champions League finalist Inter Milan.

German Cano’s third-minute strike was followed up by a second from Hercules in the third minute of added time to seal a shock 2-0 win against the Serie A runners-up.

Fluminense’s German Cano scores their first goal past Inter Milan’s Yann Sommer in the round of 16 tie [Agustin Marcarian/Reuters]

Who did Al Hilal beat to reach the quarterfinals?

Al Hilal secured second spot behind Real Madrid in Group H after draws against the Spanish giants and Austria’s Red Bull Salzburg, and a win against Mexico’s Pachuca.

A daunting test against defending Club World Cup champions, Manchester City.

A thrilling 4-3 win after extra time sent the Saudi Pro League club into the quarterfinals with one of the greatest upsets in the tournament’s history.

Who could Fluminense or Al Hilal face in the semifinal?

The winner of this match will face the winner of the second quarterfinal, England’s Chelsea or Brazil’s Palmeiras, in the last four.

That tie will take place at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia immediately after the Fluminense and Al Hilal match.

Who completes the Club World Cup quarterfinal lineup?

Paris Saint-Germain against Bayern Munich and Real Madrid against Borussia Dortmund complete the quarterfinal lineup, with the winners of those ties facing each other in the semifinals.

Fluminense captain Thiago Silva’s pre-match thoughts

“I think we’ve played very well in this competition. It’s not easy to play against European teams, but the motivation for us is different,” Silva said. “I’m very proud of my team and myself as well, because 10 days ago I had a hamstring injury. Now, we need to recover well because, after three or four days, we have to play again. I’m not young, you know? So I need to recover well. ”

FIFA Club World Cup - Round of 16 - Manchester City v Al Hilal - Camping World Stadium, Orlando, Florida, U.S. - June 30, 2025 Al Hilal's Marcos Leonardo scores their first goal
Al Hilal’s Marcos Leonardo scores their first goal against Manchester City [Hannah Mckay/Reuters]

Al Hilal’s Marcos Leonardo’s pre-match thoughts

“I’ve had a difficult time in the last two months,” said Al Hilal’s two-goal hero against Manchester City. “My mother spent 70 days in the Intensive Care Unit. Today, she’s fine, thank God. When I scored those two goals, I thought of her – she was able to watch the match. We have to think about our families – people who want the best for us. If they weren’t watching, I wouldn’t be here today. ”

Fluminense team news

Left-back Rene is suspended for the match following his second booking of the tournament in the win against Inter.

Al Hilal team news

Musab Al-Juwayr made his comeback from a knee injury with a substitute appearance in the win against Man City.

Captain Salem Al-Dawsari is unlikely to feature again in the competition after picking up a hamstring problem.

Head-to-head

This is a first meeting between the sides.

Form guide

Fluminense’s last five games:

W-W-W-D-W

Al Hilal’s last five games:

W-D-D-W-W

Potential Fluminense starting lineup

Fabio; Samuel Xavier, Thiago Silva (C), Freytes, Fuentes; Martinelli, Hercules; Arias, Nonato, Canobbio; Cano

Potential Al Hilal starting lineup

Gill and India dominate England on the first day of second Test

India’s Shubman Gill played a masterful captain’s knock to rescue India with his second century of the series on the opening day of the second Test against England as the tourists finished on 310-5 at stumps at Edgbaston.

Gill was under pressure due to his team selection on Wednesday after pace spearhead Jasprit Bumrah was rested, but the skipper played a dogged knock and barely put a foot wrong as he wore down the England bowlers while playing confident strokes.

Gill had taken 199 balls to bring up his seventh test hundred, the slowest of his career, but authoritative in the circumstances as he ended the day unbeaten on 114 while he had Ravindra Jadeja (41 not out) for company at stumps.

After Ben Stokes won the toss and put India in to bat, opener Yashasvi Jaiswal looked well set for a big score but fell in the second session to the England skipper when he was on 87 to miss out on his second ton in the series.

India have never won a Test at Edgbaston in eight attempts, and when they were reeling at 211-5, England threatened to reopen wounds from the first test at Headingley, where the tourists’ lower order collapsed in both innings.

But Jadeja walked in to steady the ship and consolidated the innings with a 99-run partnership with Gill as the all-rounder rotated strike without taking any undue risks, propelling his skipper towards triple figures.

As England eagerly waited for the new ball, Joe Root bowled the 80th over in a bid to surprise the set batters, but after four dot balls, Gill executed two fine sweeps to bring up a second century in the series.

India’s Shubman Gill batting on day one of the second men’s Test [Martin Rickett/PA Images via Getty Images]

Earlier, India lost opener KL Rahul cheaply when he played on a rising delivery from Chris Woakes while Karun Nair, who was promoted up the order, fell for 31, caught in the slips just before lunch after playing some exquisite drives.

Jaiswal saw off the new ball early on in cloudy conditions, but once the lush green outfield was bathed in sunshine, he got into his groove and scored at nearly a run a ball, with Josh Tongue bearing the brunt of his onslaught.

Gill took the majority of the strike in the second session while Jaiswal watched on, and that was when Stokes made the breakthrough.

Having scored a century in the opening test, Jaiswal was on 87 when he sliced at a wide delivery and was caught behind by an ecstatic Jamie Smith to leave India on 161-3.

That brought Rishabh Pant to the crease and the wicketkeeper-batter, who smashed two centuries in the first test, launched spinner Shoaib Bashir over the deep mid-wicket boundary for the first six of the match.

England's Ben Stokes speaks to Umpire Sharfuddoula (right) on day one of the Second Rothesay Men's Test at Edgbaston
England’s Ben Stokes, centre, speaks to Umpire Sharfuddoula, right, on day one at Edgbaston [Martin Rickett/PA Images via Getty Images]

Bashir had the last laugh, however, as Pant (25) lived dangerously and the batter made another attempt to clear the ropes, only to find Zak Crawley in the deep, opening the door to the lower order.

Nitish Kumar Reddy came in and lasted six balls when Woakes struck again, tempting the India batter to leave a superb delivery that nipped back in and hit the top of off stump to send the bails flying.

England had named the same team and India made three changes, resting Bumrah as they manage his back issues through the series – a decision that baffled former players and coaches.

Olivia Rodrigo in rare public outing with boyfriend Louis Partridge as they share kiss

American songstress Olivia Rodrigo swapped performing to crowds to being in them as she cosied up with partner Louis Partridge at Wimbledon on Wednesday

Olivia Rodrigo and Louis Partridge at Wimbledon

Hot on the heels of her impressive Glastonbury set, Olivia Rodrigo has enjoyed some downtime in the UK. The American songstress, 22, might have had the crowd in the palm of her hand on Sunday at Worthy Farm, but on Wednesday it was her turn to play onlooker.

Sitting with her boyfriend Louis Partridge, 22, Olivia looked every bit in love as the duo shared a kiss in the stands at Wimbledon. They also held hands and cuddled up to each other as they took in day three’s action at SW19.

The Drivers Licence star looked amazing as she turned up in a scarlet and cream checkered dress. Her man matched her attire too, rocking a navy suit with a striped scarlet tie.

Olivia and Louis
The pair locked lips at Wimbledon(Image: WireImage)

Olivia looked to be enjoying the action as she was seen cheering and smiling. And the duo seemed to be adoring time together in their busy schedule as they remained close and packed on the displays of affection court side.

It comes after she amazed a jam-packed crowd on the Pyramid Stage on Sunday. Playing her biggest hits, including Drivers Licence, Vampire and Traitor, Olivia showcased her talents with flawless vocals and impressive piano skills. However, it was a surprise guest appearance that had fans gobsmacked on the night.

Article continues below
Louis and Olivia
Louis and Olivia seemed to be enjoying the action(Image: Anadolu via Getty Images)

Olivia welcomed singer-songwriter Robert Smith to perform a double of duets mid-way through her set. And it was their performance of Friday I’m In Love that had fans gasping.

Taking to Twitter/X, one stunned user wrote: “Jfc I didn’t realise I needed Olivia Rodrigo singing Friday im in love so much.” Another added: “Robert Smith coming out to sing Friday I’m in Love with Olivia Rodrigo is a pure Glastonbury moment.”

Olivia Rodrigo at Glastonbury
Olivia Rodrigo at Glastonbury(Image: AFP via Getty Images)

A third said: “Olivia Rodrigo bringing Robert Smith on and doing Friday I’m in Love was not on my Glasto bingo card but wow,” while a fourth claimed: “I NEED TO GO TO AN OLIVIA RODRIGO’S CONCERT. “

Other famous faces at Wimbledon on Wednesday included Dave Grohl and Jordyn Blum. The rock legend arrived with his wife and both opted for sharp tailored looks, complementing each other with their power suits.

Leslie Mann also chose the colour of the season for her appearance as she sported a butter yellow tailored blazer and white lace maxi skirt. Tom Daley also braved the rain in what appeared to be a Paul Smith teal suit.

The Olympic diver followed the popular tailoring theme we’ve already seen a lot of as he kept the look chic and monochromatic with a similar shade green shirt and tie underneath.

Priyanka Chopra and Nick Jonas also looked more loved-up than ever as they posed for snaps.

Article continues below

At least eight people die in record-breaking heatwave across Europe

At least eight people have died across Europe as an early summer heatwave grips much of the continent, triggering health alerts and forest fires and forcing the closure of a nuclear reactor at a Swiss power plant.

Authorities in Spain’s Catalonia region said about 14,000 people were ordered to stay indoors due to two wildfires that broke out almost simultaneously in the province of Lleida.

In one of the blazes near the city of Cosco, “two people were found lifeless by firefighters,” the fire and emergency service said in a statement on Wednesday.

The exact cause of the fire was unclear, but the service said the recent heat, dry conditions and strong winds increased the intensity of the flames.

Tuesday’s fire in the Catalonia region burned several farms and affected an area stretching about 40km (25 miles) before being contained, officials said.

On Wednesday, Spanish officials reported two more people died due to the heatwave in Extremadura and Cordoba.

Spain is in the midst of an intense heatwave with temperatures exceeding 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in many places, and several heat records were set for the month of June.

France also experienced its hottest June since 2003.

Its energy minister reported two deaths linked to the heat with 300 others taken to hospital on Wednesday.

Weather forecaster Meteo France said red alerts remained for several areas of central France, and Catherine Vautrin, the health and families minister, said authorities should remain vigilant.

“In the coming days, we’ll see the consequences, particularly on the most vulnerable, and I’m thinking particularly of the elderly,” she said.

Two men over the age of 60 also died from the heat on beaches in Sardinia in Italy, the ANSA news agency reported.

In Germany, temperatures were forecast to peak at 40C (104F) in some areas, making it the hottest day of the year. Fire brigades were also tackling several forest fires in the eastern states of Brandenburg and Saxony on Wednesday.

Storm warnings issued

Italy, France and Germany have also warned of the risk of powerful storms due to excessive warming in unstable atmospheres.

Violent storms in the French Alps late on Monday triggered mudslides, disrupting rail traffic between Paris and Milan.

The Swiss utility Axpo shut down one reactor at the Beznau Nuclear Power Plant and halved output at another on Tuesday because of the high temperature of river water.

Water is used for cooling and other purposes at nuclear power plants, and restrictions were expected to continue as temperatures are monitored.

Scientists said heatwaves have arrived earlier this year, spiking temperatures by up to 10C (50F) in some regions as warming seas encouraged the formation of a heat dome over much of Europe, trapping hot air masses.

Greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels are a cause of climate change, they said, with deforestation and industrial practices being other contributing factors. Last year was the planet’s hottest on record.

“Extreme heat is testing our resilience and putting the health and lives of millions at risk,” Inger Andersen, executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme, told the Reuters news agency.

Corrie’s Sally Dynevor reveals she and husband Tim are making a huge change

Sally has played Sally Metcalfe on Coronation Street for almost 40 years, admitting she’s ” not getting the stories that I used to get” but reveals she and real life husband Tim have bigger ambitions

Coronation Street’s Sally Dynevor with husband Tim(Image: Instagram/ @sallydynevor)

Corrie stalwart Sally Dynevor has an uncanny amount in common with her Weatherfield character – starting with sharing the same name.

Like Weatherfield’s Sally Metcalfe, she was diagnosed with breast cancer 15 years ago – so she was going through the experience both on and off screen.

And like the interfering knicker factory supervisor, who she will have played for four decades next year, she is devoted to her real-life husband, writer and actor Tim Dynevor, 63.

Like Sally and her screen hubby, another Tim (Metcalfe) – who are considering fostering on the soap – in real life the Dynevors are keen to enjoy new experiences and take on exciting challenges.

Not least because they are both cancer survivors – after Tim, 63, was diagnosed in 2023 and, thankfully, like Sally, made a full recovery.

READ MORE: Emmerdale star loses 4 stone as lifestyle change reverses major health issue

Sue Jenkins as Gloria Todd, Julie Goodyear as Bet Gilroy, and Sally when she first joined Corrie in 1986
Sue Jenkins as Gloria Todd, Julie Goodyear as Bet Gilroy, and Sally when she first joined Corrie in 1986 (Image: Granada Television)
Article continues below

Determined to make the most of every moment, earlier this year, they enjoyed a dream holiday – from their ‘bucket list’ wish list – to Japan.

“Going through something like that makes you want to embrace life all the more,”

Sally tells The Mirror. ”We’d love to do more travelling. We’re trying really hard to just do lots of lovely things while we can.

“You just don’t know what’s round the corner, do you? That’s why we’ve decided we should do a couple of our bucket list things.

“We all put stuff off and think ‘it’s too expensive, I’m not going to do that. ’ But we’re in our 60s now and this is the time to be doing these things. ”

As Sally, whose storylines over the years have included fights, affairs and even a stint in prison after being wrongly convicted of fraud, fulfils her dreams off-screen, she admits that she is getting fewer of the dramatic Corrie stories these days.

Sally with her actress daughter Phoebe who starred in Bridgerton
Sally with her actress daughter Phoebe who starred in Bridgerton(Image: sallydynevor/Instagram)

She says: “Obviously, I’m not getting the stories that I used to get, but when I do get a story, I really look forward to doing it and really enjoy it. ”

But, despite reaching her 60s, she remains an important character and when she is not working, her sense of adventure has increased with age. An avid breast cancer fundraiser, she is planning a daunting week-long trek climbing Mount Kilimanjaro – the highest mountain in Africa – in September, alongside her 28 year-old son Sam, a PR, in aid of Prevent Breast Cancer.

“I am quite nervous about it,” Sally admits. “We’re camping in the middle of nowhere and it’s very cold when you get up to the top.

“But I’m determined and I’m definitely going to do my very best to get to the summit. I know people struggle with altitude sickness, but we’ve got a great guide and I think it’ s important to push yourself out of your comfort zone. Life is exciting when you challenge yourself. It’s a big wide world out there.”

Corrie's Sally Dynevor reunites with on-screen daughters and real life daughter Hattie
Corrie’s Sally Dynevor reunites with on-screen daughters and other real life daughter Hattie (Image: Instagram)

On her last major climb to Everest base camp for the charity, in 2019 – a challenge that raised £100,000 – at 5,364 metres Sally was taken ill, with altitude sickness. “It was tough and I was six years younger then,” she says. “We walked up to the top of Mount Kawakita during the night, so we could see Everest in the morning. Walking back down I was delirious.

“I didn’t know where I was, I couldn’t breathe properly and every step felt like walking on the moon. I could hear people around me saying: ‘get her back down,’ ‘don’t let her go to sleep. ’ And all I wanted to do was sleep. ”

Altitude sickness, which happens when people quickly climb to a place higher than 2,500 metres above sea level, causes symptoms including sickness, exhaustion, confusion, dizziness, sleepiness and shortage of breath and can be life-threatening.

But Sally – devoted to fundraising for Prevent Breast Cancer – is undeterred, saying: “It’s the only charity in Europe committed solely to predicting and preventing breast cancer.

Sally with husband Tim in Japan
Sally with husband Tim in Japan (Image: INSTAGRAM / Sally Dynevor)

“We’re currently building a training hospital at the Nightingale Centre where we train radiographers for screenings and mammograms, so they can go and work around the country because there’s a shortage.

“We need to be preventing these diseases, not living with the consequences when they’ve happened. ”

Diagnosed with breast cancer in 2009, ironically at the same time that her Corrie character had the disease, Sally had a lumpectomy and six months of chemotherapy before making a full recovery.

But she says it was also very difficult for her family. She says: “That’s one of the worst things – the impact on families. It affects everyone in your circle. ”

Discussing both herself and Tim getting the all-clear after cancer, she adds: “You walk out and you just feel so grateful.

“While it’s been awful, we look at in a positive way and think ‘we’ve both been through it now, that’s our blip. ’ Hopefully now we’ll live long and happy lives, with nothing more happening to us. ”

Coronation Street actress Sally Dynevor stands with her husband, Tim, after receiving her MBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) at an investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle on February 2, 2022
Coronation Street actress Sally Dynevor stands with her husband, Tim, after receiving her MBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) at an investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle on February 2, 2022(Image: Getty Images)

Also parents to Phoebe, 30, and Hattie, 21, who are both actors, Phoebe won a BAFTA Rising Star nomination last year, starred in the first two series of the period drama Bridgerton and is currently filming alongside Jake Gyllenhaal and Ashley Walters in the upcoming film Remain, while Hattie starred in Waterloo Road.

Meanwhile, Sally is looking forward to celebrating 40 years on the Cobbles in 2026 – and she has dropped big hints at her screen daughters making a comeback. She says: “It’s a very different show now to the show I started in; it’s a much bigger cast, but I still love it and I still get excited. ”

Still in touch with her Corrie daughters Helen Flanagan (Rosie) who left the show in 2018, and Brooke Vincent (Sophie) who departed the following year, she says: “I’ve always wanted them to come back, so I’d be thrilled.

“It would be great if they came back at Christmas, even if it’s just for Christmas Day – just to have them around the table again would be wonderful. So, I’m hoping that might happen, you never know.”

Currently involved in a fostering storyline with Tim, while she is enjoying the plot, there is no danger of her following suit in real life

She laughs: “I looked after my niece’s two little boys recently. They’re seven and four and Tim and I were exhausted.

Article continues below