Archive August 8, 2025

Gladiator star Steel says medical procedure contributed to death of newborn son

Gladiator Steel – real name Zack George – and his wife Samantha give their first joint interview about the sad passing of their beloved son Leo who died after 13 days

When baby Leo was born in March, mum Samantha George was afraid to open her eyes. At just 23 weeks into her pregnancy, her longed for little boy had arrived dangerously early and doctors warned her there was only a 50% chance he would survive the birth.

But like his Gladiator dad Zack, 35, Leo was a fighter. “He had Zack’s nose and forehead,” smiles Samantha. “We said to the doctors, ‘As long as you feel there is a chance of life, do whatever you can.’”

When Leo was born, Zack – Steel on Gladiators – and his wife Samantha were already parents to Ivy, two. Zack and Samantha married last year at Harlaxton Manor in Grantham, in front of friends, family and a band of Gladiators.

Zack George has set up a charity called Leo and Friends in honour of his beloved son who died earlier this year(Image: Chelsea White)

“We always said we wanted to give Ivy a sibling,” says Samantha. “We married in September and were pregnant at the end of October. We were so chuffed.”

The pregnancy had progressed normally and at the 20-week scan, Samantha and Zack were delighted to discover they were expecting a baby boy. “It was perfect,” adds Zack. “We always wanted a boy and a girl.”

So they were shocked when two weeks later, Samantha felt something was wrong. At the hospital, doctors told her she was in labour – and talked them through their options.

“They give you a piece of paper that basically tells you the likelihood of your baby surviving, and if they do, the possibilities of issues with their sight, hearing, and other disabilities,” says Zack, who was told just 28 out of 100 babies born as early as Leo grow up. “They weren’t great stats. We could have chosen an abortion,” says Zack. “But that never would have been an option.”

Zack and Samantha had experience of the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) as their niece had been born at 24 weeks and, against the odds, she’d thrived. They hoped Leo would have a similar journey and the early signs were promising.

“He had everything going for him,” says Zack. “He was big, he had a good heart rate.”

They decided their baby needed a strong name. “So he became Leo the Lion because he was strong and he was fighting,” Zack says.

At first, Leo seemed to be defying the odds. “It’s such a rocky road,” says Samantha. “But when your baby comes out alive, you think, ‘We’re just going to get through this now.’”

Zack and Samantha hold toddler Ivy in a field
Zack and Samantha George love being parents and want another baby(Image: Chelsea White)

Zack shared Samantha’s positivity, and they stayed by their son’s side, willing him to keep going.

“He was here for 13 days,” says Zack. “He came out and he was really strong. There was a honeymoon period where for the first day or two everything seemed to be going really well. So well, they decided to take him off the ventilator. He lasted about six hours on CPAP (a non-invasive form of breathing support), then they retubed him, which he stayed on.”

“After the ‘honeymoon stage’ – the first two days – things started to happen, like brain bleeds,” says Zack. “Leo needed blood transfusions, which is normal; his lungs were collapsing, which they expected, there was a hole in his heart and that’s expected, too, as that hole in the heart closes up in later pregnancy.”

However, there was another issue worrying doctors. “He was getting air pockets around his lungs,” explains Zack. “Around the tenth day they started getting a bit bigger. They came to the conclusion that when they tubed him, either the first or the second time, they created a hole in his windpipe. It’s no one’s fault, a baby that young is really fragile, it’s just a risk.”

A crocheted lion keyring is a reminder of Leo
Baby Leo will never be forgotten and the charity Leo and Friends will be his legacy(Image: Chelsea White)

Sadly, baby Leo began to deteriorate and Zack and Samantha’s family came in to say their goodbyes.

“That was really hard, because if it hadn’t happened, he would probably still be here,” says Zack. “A 23-week-old baby has so much to do. Overnight, he got quite bad, that’s when we went in and he passed away.”

Doctors asked Samantha and Zack if they wanted to try CPR but they couldn’t ask Leo to fight any more. “Imagine that on a baby so tiny?” says Samantha. “We didn’t want to put him through any more pain.”

Ivy never met her brother, and Samantha and Zack will wait until she’s older to tell her what happened. But she brought comfort in their darkest period.

“Ivy definitely helped,” says Zack. “She brought us a lot of joy, kept us smiling and was a good distraction. She has helped us more than she’ll ever know.”

Zack and Samantha have leaned on each other, too, and they’ve been helped by fans who have reached out to them and shared their own experiences. After Leo passed away, Samantha felt “switched off from the whole world” but Zack pulled her through. “It makes you realise you’ve married the right person,” says Samantha, her eyes filling with tears.

Samantha holds toddler Ivy and Zack smiles at them with his arms around them both
Ivy has helped her parents Zack and Samantha through their grief(Image: Chelsea White)

Zack poured his feelings into writing a poem he read at Leo’s funeral and began to think of ways to honour his son’s memory. “I’m not normally good at writing poems, but it seemed to come quite naturally.”

Now Zack and Samantha are launching their charity Leo And Friends, which will raise awareness as well as money for Leicester hospital’s NICU department. It starts with a fundraiser called 13 Days Fighting, sponsored by Currys, which will take place across the UK this month. “I want to try to get something positive out of a really bad situation,” Zack says. “We want to honour him every year with a different challenge and raise awareness and money for Leicester hospital and its amazing staff.”

Zack’s first challenge will be a burpee mile – about 800 burpees – every day for each of the 13 days that his son lived. “Just doing one mile is hard,” says Zack. “Doing 13 back to back will be extremely tough, but I want that. I’m looking forward to the challenge.”

Samantha plays with her daughter Ivy in a grassy field. They are both wearing white
Samantha would like to have another baby so Ivy can have a sibling to play with(Image: Chelsea White)

Zack and Samantha are still processing their grief, but they hope to one day have another baby. “I love Ivy so much I want to give her a friend for life. We’ve been given the OK to try again when we’re ready.”

Article continues below

Both Samantha and Zack feel baby Leo is watching over them and will always be part of their family. “It’s been a really short time, but I need to fill that void,” says Samantha. “We want another baby, another little boy, but we both say, ‘Whatever Leo decides to give us.’ People say you’ll never replace Leo, but I do feel my next baby will be a big part of him.”

Gladiator star Steel says medical procedure contributed to death of newborn son

Gladiator Steel – real name Zack George – and his wife Samantha give their first joint interview about the sad passing of their beloved son Leo who died after 13 days

When baby Leo was born in March, mum Samantha George was afraid to open her eyes. At just 23 weeks into her pregnancy, her longed for little boy had arrived dangerously early and doctors warned her there was only a 50% chance he would survive the birth.

But like his Gladiator dad Zack, 35, Leo was a fighter. “He had Zack’s nose and forehead,” smiles Samantha. “We said to the doctors, ‘As long as you feel there is a chance of life, do whatever you can.’”

When Leo was born, Zack – Steel on Gladiators – and his wife Samantha were already parents to Ivy, two. Zack and Samantha married last year at Harlaxton Manor in Grantham, in front of friends, family and a band of Gladiators.

Zack George has set up a charity called Leo and Friends in honour of his beloved son who died earlier this year(Image: Chelsea White)

“We always said we wanted to give Ivy a sibling,” says Samantha. “We married in September and were pregnant at the end of October. We were so chuffed.”

The pregnancy had progressed normally and at the 20-week scan, Samantha and Zack were delighted to discover they were expecting a baby boy. “It was perfect,” adds Zack. “We always wanted a boy and a girl.”

So they were shocked when two weeks later, Samantha felt something was wrong. At the hospital, doctors told her she was in labour – and talked them through their options.

“They give you a piece of paper that basically tells you the likelihood of your baby surviving, and if they do, the possibilities of issues with their sight, hearing, and other disabilities,” says Zack, who was told just 28 out of 100 babies born as early as Leo grow up. “They weren’t great stats. We could have chosen an abortion,” says Zack. “But that never would have been an option.”

Zack and Samantha had experience of the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) as their niece had been born at 24 weeks and, against the odds, she’d thrived. They hoped Leo would have a similar journey and the early signs were promising.

“He had everything going for him,” says Zack. “He was big, he had a good heart rate.”

They decided their baby needed a strong name. “So he became Leo the Lion because he was strong and he was fighting,” Zack says.

At first, Leo seemed to be defying the odds. “It’s such a rocky road,” says Samantha. “But when your baby comes out alive, you think, ‘We’re just going to get through this now.’”

Zack and Samantha hold toddler Ivy in a field
Zack and Samantha George love being parents and want another baby(Image: Chelsea White)

Zack shared Samantha’s positivity, and they stayed by their son’s side, willing him to keep going.

“He was here for 13 days,” says Zack. “He came out and he was really strong. There was a honeymoon period where for the first day or two everything seemed to be going really well. So well, they decided to take him off the ventilator. He lasted about six hours on CPAP (a non-invasive form of breathing support), then they retubed him, which he stayed on.”

“After the ‘honeymoon stage’ – the first two days – things started to happen, like brain bleeds,” says Zack. “Leo needed blood transfusions, which is normal; his lungs were collapsing, which they expected, there was a hole in his heart and that’s expected, too, as that hole in the heart closes up in later pregnancy.”

However, there was another issue worrying doctors. “He was getting air pockets around his lungs,” explains Zack. “Around the tenth day they started getting a bit bigger. They came to the conclusion that when they tubed him, either the first or the second time, they created a hole in his windpipe. It’s no one’s fault, a baby that young is really fragile, it’s just a risk.”

A crocheted lion keyring is a reminder of Leo
Baby Leo will never be forgotten and the charity Leo and Friends will be his legacy(Image: Chelsea White)

Sadly, baby Leo began to deteriorate and Zack and Samantha’s family came in to say their goodbyes.

“That was really hard, because if it hadn’t happened, he would probably still be here,” says Zack. “A 23-week-old baby has so much to do. Overnight, he got quite bad, that’s when we went in and he passed away.”

Doctors asked Samantha and Zack if they wanted to try CPR but they couldn’t ask Leo to fight any more. “Imagine that on a baby so tiny?” says Samantha. “We didn’t want to put him through any more pain.”

Ivy never met her brother, and Samantha and Zack will wait until she’s older to tell her what happened. But she brought comfort in their darkest period.

“Ivy definitely helped,” says Zack. “She brought us a lot of joy, kept us smiling and was a good distraction. She has helped us more than she’ll ever know.”

Zack and Samantha have leaned on each other, too, and they’ve been helped by fans who have reached out to them and shared their own experiences. After Leo passed away, Samantha felt “switched off from the whole world” but Zack pulled her through. “It makes you realise you’ve married the right person,” says Samantha, her eyes filling with tears.

Samantha holds toddler Ivy and Zack smiles at them with his arms around them both
Ivy has helped her parents Zack and Samantha through their grief(Image: Chelsea White)

Zack poured his feelings into writing a poem he read at Leo’s funeral and began to think of ways to honour his son’s memory. “I’m not normally good at writing poems, but it seemed to come quite naturally.”

Now Zack and Samantha are launching their charity Leo And Friends, which will raise awareness as well as money for Leicester hospital’s NICU department. It starts with a fundraiser called 13 Days Fighting, sponsored by Currys, which will take place across the UK this month. “I want to try to get something positive out of a really bad situation,” Zack says. “We want to honour him every year with a different challenge and raise awareness and money for Leicester hospital and its amazing staff.”

Zack’s first challenge will be a burpee mile – about 800 burpees – every day for each of the 13 days that his son lived. “Just doing one mile is hard,” says Zack. “Doing 13 back to back will be extremely tough, but I want that. I’m looking forward to the challenge.”

Samantha plays with her daughter Ivy in a grassy field. They are both wearing white
Samantha would like to have another baby so Ivy can have a sibling to play with(Image: Chelsea White)

Zack and Samantha are still processing their grief, but they hope to one day have another baby. “I love Ivy so much I want to give her a friend for life. We’ve been given the OK to try again when we’re ready.”

Article continues below

Both Samantha and Zack feel baby Leo is watching over them and will always be part of their family. “It’s been a really short time, but I need to fill that void,” says Samantha. “We want another baby, another little boy, but we both say, ‘Whatever Leo decides to give us.’ People say you’ll never replace Leo, but I do feel my next baby will be a big part of him.”

MVP open to funding Taylor v Cameron 3 at Croke Park

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Jake Paul’s Most Vaulable Promotions is prepared to fund a Croke Park stadium fight between Katie Taylor and Chantelle Cameron, says its CEO Nakisa Bidarian.

MVP, fronted by Youtuber-turned-boxer Paul, has worked with Ireland’s Taylor on her last two fights against Amanda Serrano in the United States.

Cameron, the only woman to have beaten Taylor in the pro ranks, is signed to MVP and making the trilogy between the rivals is one of MVP’s priorities.

“Chantelle is a tough fight for Katie”, Bidarian told BBC Sport.

“It’s her only loss. So you have to really see if that makes sense, and we’d like to do that at Croke Park.

” We haven’t talked to Matchroom about it, but Jake and I have talked at length about it. “

Cameron, 34, has been chasing a third fight with Taylor since their rematch in late 2023.

This week the WBC ordered 39-year-old Taylor to defend her light-welterweight world title against the Englishwoman.

Taylor has spoken openly about her desire to fight at Croke Park, but her promoters Matchroom have been unable to come to terms with the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA).

Her two fights in Ireland have been at the 3Arena in Dublin, housing about 9, 000 fans.

Matchroom promoter Eddie Hearn says the 82, 000-seater stadium has significant costs that would need to be paid upfront and it’s” difficult to make the numbers work “with those and prospective purses.

Bidarian, however, says MVP is willing to provide the funds.

” 100% for the right fight, we would be willing to do that, “Bidarian said”. There’s no doubt about it. “

Responding to Bidarian’s comments, Hearn said:” They had the chance to fund the Serrano fight at Croke Park, but they chose to go to Madison Square Garden because it was a lot more lucrative.

“It’s a nice soundbite. But the reality is it won’t be down to Nakisa.

” It will be down to Katie Taylor which at this stage the first question is, do you want to fight again?

“Croke Park is really the only box that’s never been ticked, so if she fights again, I think it will probably come with the carrot of Croke Park.

Scotney chases undisputed &amp, Harper v Dubois

Bidarian and MVP now have a host of elite female fighters to look after with Ellie Scotney, Terri Harper, Savannah Marshall, Ramla Ali and Shannon Courtenay on their books.

Several of those made their promotional debuts on the undercard of Taylor v Serrano 3 in July.

Nearly 6m people watched the event on Netflix, 4.2m of those in the US which is more than the audience for the WNBA finals or Coco Gauff’s French Open final triumph.

Bidarian says 70% of the revenue went to the fighters with over eight figures being spent on purses.

MVP plan to stage their first event in the UK sometime between December and February.

Asked what fights MVP wanted to make next, Bidarian said securing IBF, WBO and WBC super-bantamweight world champion Scotney an undisputed title shot is a priority, as is an all-British unification clash at lightweight.

WBO lightweight champion Harper is MVP’s latest British signing and Bidarian is keen to match the Doncaster boxer with rival world champion Caroline Dubois.

MVP also recently signed former UFC champion Holly Holm and WBA lightweight champion Stephanie Han, who are both options for Harper.

” Holly is the true wild card in that equation because she should be getting ranked]with a sanctioning body], and she should be able to fight for a championship, “Bidarian said.

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Brooklyn Beckham blasted by celebrity chef after burning bacon in carbonara clip

The aspiring chef, 26, made the culinary blunder in a clip shared with his 16.1 million Instagram followers and was last night blasted by Italian chef Aldo Zilli

Brooklyn was heavily criticised for burning his lardons(Image: brooklynpeltzbeckham/Instagram)

Brooklyn Beckham has been roasted by a top celebrity chef – for sticking burnt bacon on a carbonara.

The 26-year-old made the culinary faux pas in a clip shared on social media. Last night Italian chef Aldo Zilli blasted: “Nowadays every celebrity is jumping on the cooking bandwagon. Burning guanciale [bacon lardons] would cause it to become bitter, hard and make the carbonara taste terrible – maybe he needs a masterclass from Aldo Zilli! Stop changing recipes!”

Zilli, 69, who specialises in Italian cuisine, was among hundreds to criticise the Beckham star, with one fan adding: “As an Italian.. no. That cheek is burnt.” But Brooklyn hit back: “Guanciale has a lot of sugar in and that’s why it’s darker. I slow cooked it so it’s not burned.” It comes after reports of Victoria Beckham’s four-word comment to Geri Horner amid Spice Girls ‘feud’.

READ MORE: Romeo Beckham shares cryptic tattoo amid family feud with brother BrooklynREAD MORE: Brooklyn Beckham and Nicola Peltz renew wedding vows amid bitter family feud

Brooklyn posted the video on Instagram(Image: brooklynpeltzbeckham/Instagram)

It’s not the Beckham star’s first culinary gaffe. Last year, he was slammed for serving up blackened pizza in a clip plugging his new hot sauce, Cloud9. And he was branded “unhygienic” for using sea water to make a pasta dish. His now defunct YouTube show Cookin with Brooklyn reportedly cost £74K per episode to produce.

Brooklyn, now estranged from parents David and Victoria, renewed his vows to wife Nicola Peltz, 30, last week. A source said: “This is a moment to celebrate their love and commitment, and to create a meaningful memory together.”

Back in June, Brooklyn shared a memory of the day he proposed to Nicola in 2019. At the time of the couple’s third wedding anniversary in April, neither Victoria or David publicly wished the pair a happy anniversary which, according to reports, was unusual considering they are both avid social media users.

Chef Aldo Zilli says burnt lardons would make a carbonara “taste terrible” (Image: Supplied by Aldo Zilli)
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The family feud intensified when Brooklyn failed to attend any his dad’s 50th birthday parties in May. And highlighting the estrangement further, Brooklyn happily posted a birthday message to his father-in-law, Nelson Peltz. At the time he wrote: “Happy birthday Nelson x We love you.”

Peter Obi Urges JAMB To Show Students Compassion Amid Centre Blacklisting

Former presidential candidate in the 2023 election under the Labour Party, Peter Obi, has called on the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) to adopt a compassionate approach in handling its services to students, following the blacklisting of several accredited Computer-Based Test (CBT) centres in Anambra State.

In a post on his official X handle on Friday, Obi said he recently encountered a large crowd of students outside the JAMB office in Amawbia, Anambra State, with some even sitting on the fence. Upon speaking with them, he learned they were there to make changes to their course or institution choice services, which are ordinarily available at CBT centres.

READ ALSO: Niger Assembly Urges Bago To Ban Sign-Out Day In Schools

“While passing through Amawbia, in Anambra State, recently, I noticed a large crowd of students gathered outside the JAMB office – some even perched precariously on the fence. The scene was striking and may likely be the same in some other states across the country. Troubled by what I saw, I stopped to speak with a few of the students,’’ he said.

‘’They explained that they were there to make changes to their course or institution choices. I found this surprising, as such services are ordinarily processed at JAMB-designated CBT centres. When I inquired why they weren’t using those centres, their response was disheartening: most of the CBT centres had stopped offering the service, leaving them with few or no alternatives. ”

Obi said most of these centres had stopped offering the service after being blacklisted by JAMB, forcing students to travel long distances to the state office.  

Out of 28 approved centres in the state, he noted, 17 have been blacklisted, with many of them unaware of the specific reasons except being told they were “under investigation.  

He lamented that the development had caused financial and emotional strain for students, some of whom had made up to five unsuccessful trips before being attended to. A service that should cost about ₦1,500, he added, now costs as much as ₦15,000 at the JAMB office, including unofficial fees.

“Further investigation revealed that out of 28 JAMB-approved centres ( CBTs)in Anambra State, 17 have been blacklisted. Sadly, many of the affected centres were not even informed of the specific reasons behind this action. The explanation given was the vague phrase: “under investigation. ”

“The consequences of this are far-reaching. Students are now forced to travel long distances, sometimes from remote parts of the state, just to access basic services at the JAMB state office. “From my interaction with the students, I learnt that many have made up to five unsuccessful trips before being attended to. What is more troubling is the sharp increase in the cost of processing these changes: a service that should ordinarily cost around ₦1,500 at accredited centres now costs up to ₦15,000 at the JAMB office – often padded by unofficial fees. ”

The former Anambra governor warned that the situation risks derailing the academic prospects of many young Nigerians, especially as some universities have already begun post-UTME screening. urging JAMB to allow the affected centres to continue offering services under close monitoring until investigations are concluded.

Scottish Premiership – All you need to know this weekend

We’re only a week in and we’ve had chat of board ultimatums, leaked teams, the Old Firm being split, a European revolution from our Scottish teams and a Dundee United fan falling down a flight of stairs three times.

Scottish football has delivered already, but what will week two have in store?

Game of weekend – Aberdeen v Celtic (Sun, 12: 30 BST)

Celtic started their title defence last week against St Mirren – the team who held them to a draw in the final game of the last Premiership campaign.

Having this time overcome the stubborn Buddies thanks to a late goal, Brendan Rodgers ‘ side will next hope to also gain some kind of revenge over the team who denied them a domestic treble in the season’s finale at Hampden.

Like Celtic, the Scottish Cup winners are playing only their second match of the season. The first ended in a 2-0 defeat by Heart of Midlothian.

Aberdeen had headed to Edinburgh with their fans believing they had strengthened thanks to Jimmy Thelin’s summer rebuild. Celtic, on the other hand, arrive at Pittodrie with some among their support suggesting their squad is, if anything, weaker than the one which lost in that Scottish Cup final.

However, the Hampden penalty shoot-out win apart, Aberdeen’s record against Celtic is fairly horrendous and they had not beaten the Glasgow side in their 30 previous meetings.

Rodgers ‘ team were ruthless at Pittodrie on their last visit in May – their second 5-1 scoreline against the Dons in a row and their second win there in succession.

Aberdeen Celtic heat to head

Player to watch – Kieron Bowie (Hibernian)

Martin Boyle grabbed most of the headlines, the Australia forward bagging both goals in Hibernian’s excellent 2-0 win away to Partizan Belgrade in Thursday’s Conference League qualifier.

But, while the Aberdeen-born 32-year-old was the star man as he notched goals 100 and 101 for the Leith outfit, team-mate Kieron Bowie was enhancing his growing reputation further in a team full of heroes.

The 22-year-old’s physicality troubled the Serb side’s defence throughout and it was fouls on the striker that led to Vukasin Durdevic’s 34th-minute sending off and the 70th-minute spot-kick that puts Hibs in pole position to reach the play-off round.

That came on the back of Bowie scoring both goals in Saturday’s 2-1 win away to Dundee in their Premiership opener, with Kilmarnock, who have lost in their latest five visits to Easter Road, next in his sights on Sunday.

He has come a long way in a short time since his three years with Fulham came to an end last summer after a loan spell in League One with Northampton Town and having had to wait until February to make his first Premiership start.

Six goals in 23 games for Hibs last season may not seem like a prolific total for a striker, but since that first start, he has the best minutes per goal rate of any player to score more than twice in the Scottish top-flight.

Manager in spotlight – Russell Martin (Rangers)

On the face of it, albeit on the evidence of only four unbeaten games, little has changed at Ibrox since Barry Ferguson was replaced with Russell Martin as head coach this summer.

Despite summer comings and goings, Rangers remain stubborn and clinical in European competition, while less than convincing domestically.

Having been fortunate to even escape Fir Park with a 1-1 draw in their Premiership opener against Motherwell, Martin’s side already trail reigning champions Celtic by two points in what he has stated is his priority competition this season.

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Strong words about egos, followed by the dropping of four players, including captain James Tavernier and the much-lauded Nicolas Raskin, seemed to do the trick, but it is in the Premiership where Rangers ‘ mentality has been most under scrutiny and where Martin must earn his managerial spurs.

Dundee would appear to be ideal opposition for their home league opener given Steven Pressley’s own troubles in his first months as their head coach.

On top of their failure to qualify from their League Cup group and some fan disappointment at his appointment, the former Rangers centre-half’s side lost their opening-weekend game 2-1 to Hibernian.

Dundee managed just two attempts on goal – their fewest in a Premiership home game since October 2018 against Celtic – and that came amid Pressley’s admission that summer recruitment has proved equally troublesome.

History does not provide much promise for the visitors either given Rangers are unbeaten in their last 17 meetings with Dundee, winning 14 of them, since a 2-1 defeat at Dens Park in November 2017.

Pick of the stats

All three league matches between Dundee United and Hearts last season finished as 1-0 wins to the away side, with the Tangerines winning two of those and the Jam Tarts the other.

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